The Disposition Effect as a Determinant of the Abnormal Volume and Return Reactions to Earnings Announcements

abstract: I examine the degree to which stockholders' aggregate gain/loss frame of reference in the equity of a given firm affects their response to the firm's quarterly earnings announcements. Contrary to predictions from rational expectations models of trade (Shackelford and Verrecchia 2...

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Other Authors: Weisbrod, Eric (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14670
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-146702018-06-22T03:02:42Z The Disposition Effect as a Determinant of the Abnormal Volume and Return Reactions to Earnings Announcements abstract: I examine the degree to which stockholders' aggregate gain/loss frame of reference in the equity of a given firm affects their response to the firm's quarterly earnings announcements. Contrary to predictions from rational expectations models of trade (Shackelford and Verrecchia 2002), I find that abnormal trading volume around earnings announcements is larger (smaller) when stockholders are in an aggregate unrealized capital gain (loss) position. This relation is stronger among seller-initiated trades and weaker in December, consistent with the cognitive bias referred to as the disposition effect (Shefrin and Statman 1985). Sensitivity analysis reveals that the relation is stronger among less sophisticated investors and for firms with weaker information environments, consistent with the behavioral explanation. I also present evidence on the consequences of this disposition effect. First, stockholders' aggregate unrealized capital gain position moderates the degree to which information-related determinants of trade (e.g. unexpected earnings, firm size, and forecast dispersion) affect abnormal announcement-window trading volume. Second, stockholders' aggregate unrealized capital gains position is associated with announcement-window abnormal returns, consistent with the disposition effect reducing the market's ability to efficiently incorporate earnings news into price. Dissertation/Thesis Weisbrod, Eric (Author) Hillegeist, Stephen (Advisor) Kaplan, Steven (Committee member) Mikhail, Michael (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Accounting Finance Behavioral sciences Abnormal Returns Abnormal Volume Behavioral Finance Capital Gains Disposition Effect Earnings Announcement eng 76 pages Ph.D. Accountancy 2012 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14670 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2012
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Accounting
Finance
Behavioral sciences
Abnormal Returns
Abnormal Volume
Behavioral Finance
Capital Gains
Disposition Effect
Earnings Announcement
spellingShingle Accounting
Finance
Behavioral sciences
Abnormal Returns
Abnormal Volume
Behavioral Finance
Capital Gains
Disposition Effect
Earnings Announcement
The Disposition Effect as a Determinant of the Abnormal Volume and Return Reactions to Earnings Announcements
description abstract: I examine the degree to which stockholders' aggregate gain/loss frame of reference in the equity of a given firm affects their response to the firm's quarterly earnings announcements. Contrary to predictions from rational expectations models of trade (Shackelford and Verrecchia 2002), I find that abnormal trading volume around earnings announcements is larger (smaller) when stockholders are in an aggregate unrealized capital gain (loss) position. This relation is stronger among seller-initiated trades and weaker in December, consistent with the cognitive bias referred to as the disposition effect (Shefrin and Statman 1985). Sensitivity analysis reveals that the relation is stronger among less sophisticated investors and for firms with weaker information environments, consistent with the behavioral explanation. I also present evidence on the consequences of this disposition effect. First, stockholders' aggregate unrealized capital gain position moderates the degree to which information-related determinants of trade (e.g. unexpected earnings, firm size, and forecast dispersion) affect abnormal announcement-window trading volume. Second, stockholders' aggregate unrealized capital gains position is associated with announcement-window abnormal returns, consistent with the disposition effect reducing the market's ability to efficiently incorporate earnings news into price. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Accountancy 2012
author2 Weisbrod, Eric (Author)
author_facet Weisbrod, Eric (Author)
title The Disposition Effect as a Determinant of the Abnormal Volume and Return Reactions to Earnings Announcements
title_short The Disposition Effect as a Determinant of the Abnormal Volume and Return Reactions to Earnings Announcements
title_full The Disposition Effect as a Determinant of the Abnormal Volume and Return Reactions to Earnings Announcements
title_fullStr The Disposition Effect as a Determinant of the Abnormal Volume and Return Reactions to Earnings Announcements
title_full_unstemmed The Disposition Effect as a Determinant of the Abnormal Volume and Return Reactions to Earnings Announcements
title_sort disposition effect as a determinant of the abnormal volume and return reactions to earnings announcements
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14670
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