Informed institutional shareholding : evidence from political promotion

Are institutional investors informed to the political promotion events? This paper examines the informed trading of institutional investors in the context of political promotion. Institutional investors have superior information environment compared to retail investors. It can establish private info...

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Main Author: ZHANG, Chi
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Digital Commons @ Lingnan University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://commons.ln.edu.hk/fin_etd/17
https://commons.ln.edu.hk/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1017&context=fin_etd
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spelling ndltd-ln.edu.hk-oai-commons.ln.edu.hk-fin_etd-10172019-11-02T15:17:04Z Informed institutional shareholding : evidence from political promotion ZHANG, Chi Are institutional investors informed to the political promotion events? This paper examines the informed trading of institutional investors in the context of political promotion. Institutional investors have superior information environment compared to retail investors. It can establish private information channel with firm management, financial analysts, regulatory bodies and other types of institutions. Since contemporary economic activities are more or less influenced by politics, promotion of important officials can bring favorable local economic development opportunities to companies. If institutional investors are informed to the political promotion events, they are supposed to react in advance of the occurrence of promotion events. We test this proposition in the setting of China where political power is believed to be strong. In our research, we treat the promotion of Chinese provincial politicians as a private signal to institutional investors to examine their trading pattern. Through a difference-in-difference approach, we find that institutional investors accelerate their purchase of shares of the firms exposed to the promotion events before the promotion activities actually happens and increase their shareholding in listed firms after the promotion events. The institutional investors earn a higher cumulative stock return by adjusting their portfolio to the promotion events. We also find this difference in institutional shareholding primarily occurs to firms with low state-own share percentage. 2017-09-26T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://commons.ln.edu.hk/fin_etd/17 https://commons.ln.edu.hk/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1017&context=fin_etd Theses & Dissertations en Digital Commons @ Lingnan University Finance and Financial Management
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Finance and Financial Management
spellingShingle Finance and Financial Management
ZHANG, Chi
Informed institutional shareholding : evidence from political promotion
description Are institutional investors informed to the political promotion events? This paper examines the informed trading of institutional investors in the context of political promotion. Institutional investors have superior information environment compared to retail investors. It can establish private information channel with firm management, financial analysts, regulatory bodies and other types of institutions. Since contemporary economic activities are more or less influenced by politics, promotion of important officials can bring favorable local economic development opportunities to companies. If institutional investors are informed to the political promotion events, they are supposed to react in advance of the occurrence of promotion events. We test this proposition in the setting of China where political power is believed to be strong. In our research, we treat the promotion of Chinese provincial politicians as a private signal to institutional investors to examine their trading pattern. Through a difference-in-difference approach, we find that institutional investors accelerate their purchase of shares of the firms exposed to the promotion events before the promotion activities actually happens and increase their shareholding in listed firms after the promotion events. The institutional investors earn a higher cumulative stock return by adjusting their portfolio to the promotion events. We also find this difference in institutional shareholding primarily occurs to firms with low state-own share percentage.
author ZHANG, Chi
author_facet ZHANG, Chi
author_sort ZHANG, Chi
title Informed institutional shareholding : evidence from political promotion
title_short Informed institutional shareholding : evidence from political promotion
title_full Informed institutional shareholding : evidence from political promotion
title_fullStr Informed institutional shareholding : evidence from political promotion
title_full_unstemmed Informed institutional shareholding : evidence from political promotion
title_sort informed institutional shareholding : evidence from political promotion
publisher Digital Commons @ Lingnan University
publishDate 2017
url https://commons.ln.edu.hk/fin_etd/17
https://commons.ln.edu.hk/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1017&context=fin_etd
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangchi informedinstitutionalshareholdingevidencefrompoliticalpromotion
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