The document contains 12 articles related to finance and markets. The articles discuss various topics including the use of past prices to predict information; estimating expected stock returns using firm characteristics; how market efficiency fluctuates in response to liquidity, hedge funds, and algorithmic trading; the impact of insider trading laws on stock price informativeness; whether noise traders affect markets; the lead-lag relationship between stock indexes and futures markets; characteristics of dynamic trading strategies like those used by hedge funds; evidence for temporary components in stock returns; a model of market making and how depth and spreads respond to asymmetric information; evidence that investors learn from prices changing over multiple trading periods; how strategic disclosure practices affect stock returns; and how differences of opinion among traders
The document contains 12 articles related to finance and markets. The articles discuss various topics including the use of past prices to predict information; estimating expected stock returns using firm characteristics; how market efficiency fluctuates in response to liquidity, hedge funds, and algorithmic trading; the impact of insider trading laws on stock price informativeness; whether noise traders affect markets; the lead-lag relationship between stock indexes and futures markets; characteristics of dynamic trading strategies like those used by hedge funds; evidence for temporary components in stock returns; a model of market making and how depth and spreads respond to asymmetric information; evidence that investors learn from prices changing over multiple trading periods; how strategic disclosure practices affect stock returns; and how differences of opinion among traders
Original Description:
REVIEW OF LITERATURES FORTECHNICAL ANALYSIS FROM OXFORD UNIVERSITY
The document contains 12 articles related to finance and markets. The articles discuss various topics including the use of past prices to predict information; estimating expected stock returns using firm characteristics; how market efficiency fluctuates in response to liquidity, hedge funds, and algorithmic trading; the impact of insider trading laws on stock price informativeness; whether noise traders affect markets; the lead-lag relationship between stock indexes and futures markets; characteristics of dynamic trading strategies like those used by hedge funds; evidence for temporary components in stock returns; a model of market making and how depth and spreads respond to asymmetric information; evidence that investors learn from prices changing over multiple trading periods; how strategic disclosure practices affect stock returns; and how differences of opinion among traders
The document contains 12 articles related to finance and markets. The articles discuss various topics including the use of past prices to predict information; estimating expected stock returns using firm characteristics; how market efficiency fluctuates in response to liquidity, hedge funds, and algorithmic trading; the impact of insider trading laws on stock price informativeness; whether noise traders affect markets; the lead-lag relationship between stock indexes and futures markets; characteristics of dynamic trading strategies like those used by hedge funds; evidence for temporary components in stock returns; a model of market making and how depth and spreads respond to asymmetric information; evidence that investors learn from prices changing over multiple trading periods; how strategic disclosure practices affect stock returns; and how differences of opinion among traders
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1.
Use of past prices to infer private information:
Author: David P. Brown, Robert H. Jennings Published On: 15th January 2011 Technical analysis, or the use of past prices to infer private information, has value in a model in which prices are not fully revealing and traders have rational conjectures about the relation between prices and signals. A two-period dynamic model of equilibrium is used to demonstrate that rational investors use historical prices in forming their demands and to illustrate the sensitivity of the value of technical analysis to changes in the values of the exogenous parameters.
2. Expected returns as latent variables:
Author: Nathaniel Light, Denys Maslow, Oleg Rytchkov Published On: 20th September 2001 A new approach for estimating expected returns on individual stocks from a large number of firm characteristics. We treat expected returns as latent variables and apply the partial least squares (PLS) estimator that filters them out from the characteristics under an assumption that the characteristics are linked to expected returns through one or few common latent factors. The estimates of expected returns constructed by our approach from 26 firm characteristics generate a wide cross-sectional dispersion of realized returns and outperform estimates obtained by alternative techniques. Our results also provide evidence of commonality in asset pricing anomalies.
3. The Dynamics of Market Efficiency:
Author: Dominik M. Rosh, Avandia Subramanian, Mathijs A. van Dijk Published On: 4th October 1997 We study the dynamics of high-frequency market efficiency measures. We provide evidence that these measures common across stocks and with each other, suggesting the existence of a systematic market efficiency component. In vector auto regressions, we show that shocks to funding liquidity (the TED spread), hedge fund assets under management, and a proxy for algorithmic trading are significantly associated with systematic market efficiency. Thus, stock market efficiency is prone to systematic fluctuations, and, consistent with recent theories, events and policies that impact funding liquidity can affect the aggregate degree of price efficiency.
4. Insider Trading Laws and Stock Price Informativeness :
Author: Nuno Fernandes, Miguel A. Ferreira Published On: 25th May 2015 The relation between a countrys first-time enforcement of insider trading laws and stock price informativeness using data from 48 countries over 19802003. Enforcement of insider trading laws improves price informativeness, as measured by firm-specific stock return variation, but this increase is concentrated in developed markets. In emerging market countries, price informativeness changes insignificantly after the enforcement, as the important contribution of insiders in impounding information into stock prices largely disappears. The enforcement does not achieve the goal of improving price informativeness in countries with poor legal institutions. It does turn some private information into public information, thereby reducing the cost of equity in emerging markets.
5. Noise Trading Affects Markets: An Experimental Analysis
Author: Robert Bloomfield, Maureen OHara, Gideon Saar Published On: 04 June 2015 We use a laboratory market to investigate the behavior of traders who lack informational advantages and have no exogenous reason to trade. We find that these uninformed traders behave largely as irrational contrarian noise traders, trading against recent price movements to their own detriment. The uninformed traders provide some benefits to the market: increasing market volume and depth, while reducing bid-ask spreads and the temporary price impact of trades. However, their noise trading also diminishes the ability of market prices to adjust to new information. A securities transaction tax reduces uninformed trader activity, but it reduces informed trader activity by approximately the same amount; as a result, the tax does not alter the impact of noise trading on the informational efficiency of the market. 6. A Further Analysis of the LeadLag Relationship Between the Cash Market and Stock Index Futures Market Author: Kalok Chan Published On: 29th july 2007 The intraday leadlag relation between returns of the Major Market cash index and returns of the Major Market Index futures and S&P 500 futures is investigated. Empirical results show strong evidence that the futures leads the cash index and weak evidence that the cash index leads the futures. The asymmetric leadlag relation holds between the futures and all component stocks, including those that trade in almost every five-minute interval. Evidence indicates that when more stocks move together (market-wide information) the futures leads the cash index to a greater degree. This suggests that the futures market is the main source of market-wide information
7. Empirical Characteristics of Dynamic Trading Strategies: The Case of
Hedge Funds: Author: William Fung, David A. Hsieh Published On: 04 June 2015 Article presents some new results on an unexplored dataset on hedge fund performance. The results indicate that hedge funds follow strategies that are dramatically different from mutual funds, and support the claim that these strategies are highly dynamic. The article finds five dominant investment styles in hedge funds, which when added to Sharpes (1992) asset class factor model can provide an integrated framework for style analysis of both buy-and-hold and dynamic trading strategies.
8. Temporary Components of Stock Returns:
Author: Christopher G. Lamoureux, Guofu Zhou Published On: 03 June 2015 Within the past few years several articles have suggested that returns on large equity portfolios may contain a significant predictable component at horizons 3 to 6 years. Subsequently, the tests used in these analyses have been criticized (appropriately) for having widely misunderstood size and power, rendering the conclusions inappropriate. This criticism however has not focused on the data, it addressed the properties of the tests. In this article we adopt a subjectivist analysis treating the data as fixed to ascertain whether the data have anything to say about the permanent/temporary decomposition. The data speak clearly and they tell us that for all intents and purposes, stock prices follow a random walk. 9. Market Making, Prices, and Quantity Limits: Author: Dominique Dupont Published On: 15th June 2015 This article develops a model of spread and depth setting under asymmetric information where the equilibrium depth is proportionally more sensitive than the spread to changes in the degree of information asymmetry. The analysis uses a one-period model in which a risk-neutral, monopolistic market maker faces a price-sensitive liquidity trader and a better informed trader who is alternatively risk neutral and risk averse. The equilibrium depth can take values ranging from 0 to infinity, depending on the information asymmetry, the asset volatility, and the strength of the liquidity demand, while the spread remains positive and finite.
10. Learning from Trading :
Author: Shmuel Kandel, Aharon R. Ofer, Oded Sarig Published On: 25th May 2015 The incorporation of diverse information into asset prices is empirically examined in an actual securities market with multiple rounds of trade. Using prices of Israeli index and nominal bonds of equal maturity, we calculate implied expectations of inflation that has already occurred but for which the official statistic has not yet been announced. Learning is defined as the convergence of these expectations to the actual level of inflation in the period after the end of the month but before the announcement of the official statistic. We find that the variance of the inflation expectation errors decreases with trading days in this period. The decline in the variance suggests that investors learn, by repeatedly observing prices, about the distribution of other investors information. We also find a positive relation between the dispersion of relative price changes and the size of the inflationexpectation errors on the first round of trade. The correlation diminishes as investors learn about the distribution of inflation information in the economy.
11. Strategic Disclosure and Stock Returns: Theory and
Evidence from US Cross-Listing: AUTHOR: Shingo Goto, Masahiro Watanabe, Yan Xu Published On: 25th March 2015 When a firm exercises discretion to disclose or withhold information (strategic disclosure), risk-averse investors command higher expected returns when expected cash flows decrease, producing a negative correlation between these expectations. Moreover, stock returns exhibit stronger reversal than they do when full disclosure is enforced. We propose a model that makes these predictions and provide consistent evidence using a panel of foreign firms that list American Depositary Receipts (ADRs). We find significant shifts in the time-series properties of stock returns for firms that undergo large changes in disclosure environments, such as those cross-listing on the NYSE/AMEX/NASDAQ and those from less- developed/emerging markets and code-law countries.
12. Differences of Opinion Make a Horse Race :
AUTHOR: Milton Harris, Artur Raviv Published On: 25th May 2015 A model of trading in speculative markets is developed based on differences of opinion among traders. Our purpose is to explain some of the empirical regularities that have been documented concerning the relationship between volume and price and the time-series properties of price and volume. We assume that traders share common prior beliefs and receive common information but differ in the way in which they interpret this information. Some results are that absolute price changes and volume are positively correlated, consecutive price changes exhibit negative serial correlation, and volume is positively auto correlated.