Calender effects on the nine economic sectors of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange

Calendar effects have been extensively researched in developed and emerging markets. Observing a number of these effects in one study is limited, especially in a South African context. This study investigates the day-of-the-week, January and pre-holiday effects in nine listed stock market indices of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rowjee, Brishan
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/15125
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-15125
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-151252019-05-11T03:41:19Z Calender effects on the nine economic sectors of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange Rowjee, Brishan Calendar effects have been extensively researched in developed and emerging markets. Observing a number of these effects in one study is limited, especially in a South African context. This study investigates the day-of-the-week, January and pre-holiday effects in nine listed stock market indices of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Applying the most recent sample period and including dividends, two methodologies are employed; a regression analysis and a non-parametric Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, which tests directly on skewness and kurtosis to examine if any calendar effect exists. Monday and Wednesday effects are found to exist in the Health Care (J540) sector and July shows some monthly seasonality in the Consumer Services (J550) sector. These effects persist regardless of which test is employed. No pre-holiday effect is found to exist on any of the indices observed. Consulting both methodologies, there is overwhelming evidence to support the dissipation of calendar effects on the South African stock market. This study also reveals the JSE to be weak-form efficient. 2014-08-06T07:11:28Z 2014-08-06T07:11:28Z 2014-08-06 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/15125 en application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
description Calendar effects have been extensively researched in developed and emerging markets. Observing a number of these effects in one study is limited, especially in a South African context. This study investigates the day-of-the-week, January and pre-holiday effects in nine listed stock market indices of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Applying the most recent sample period and including dividends, two methodologies are employed; a regression analysis and a non-parametric Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, which tests directly on skewness and kurtosis to examine if any calendar effect exists. Monday and Wednesday effects are found to exist in the Health Care (J540) sector and July shows some monthly seasonality in the Consumer Services (J550) sector. These effects persist regardless of which test is employed. No pre-holiday effect is found to exist on any of the indices observed. Consulting both methodologies, there is overwhelming evidence to support the dissipation of calendar effects on the South African stock market. This study also reveals the JSE to be weak-form efficient.
author Rowjee, Brishan
spellingShingle Rowjee, Brishan
Calender effects on the nine economic sectors of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange
author_facet Rowjee, Brishan
author_sort Rowjee, Brishan
title Calender effects on the nine economic sectors of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange
title_short Calender effects on the nine economic sectors of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange
title_full Calender effects on the nine economic sectors of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange
title_fullStr Calender effects on the nine economic sectors of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange
title_full_unstemmed Calender effects on the nine economic sectors of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange
title_sort calender effects on the nine economic sectors of the johannesburg stock exchange
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/15125
work_keys_str_mv AT rowjeebrishan calendereffectsonthenineeconomicsectorsofthejohannesburgstockexchange
_version_ 1719083426272772096