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This paper studies whether individual investors have information advantage before earnings announcements on an emerging market using a unique data set of TWSE. Consistent with existing research on American market, it is surprising that pre-event individual investor trading is also positively correlated with stock returns on and after earnings announcements dates in Taiwan. However, the sign of correlation between individual investor trading and stock return around earnings announcements shows weak evidence of noise trading rather than information advantage, which is opposite to that of American stock market.
Profit from earnings announcements, by taking targeted, short-term option positions explicitly timed to exploit them! Based on rigorous research and huge data sets, this book identifies the specific earnings-announcement trades most likely to yield profits, and teaches how to make these trades—in plain English, with real examples! Trading on Corporate Earnings News is the first practical, hands-on guide to profiting from earnings announcements. Writing for investors and traders at all experience levels, the authors show how to take targeted, short-term option positions that are explicitly timed to exploit the information in companies’ quarterly earnings announcements. They first present powerful findings of cutting-edge studies that have examined market reactions to quarterly earnings announcements, regularities of earnings surprises, and option trading around corporate events. Drawing on enormous data sets, they identify the types of earnings-announcement trades most likely to yield profits, based on the predictable impacts of variables such as firm size, visibility, past performance, analyst coverage, forecast dispersion, volatility, and the impact of restructurings and acquisitions. Next, they provide real examples of individual stocks–and, in some cases, conduct large sample tests–to guide investors in taking advantage of these documented regularities. Finally, they discuss crucial nuances and pitfalls that can powerfully impact performance.
This study tests whether naïve trading by individual investors, or some class of individual investors, causes post-earnings announcement drift (PEAD). Inconsistent with the individual trading hypothesis, individual investor trading fails to subsume any of the power of extreme earnings surprises to predict future abnormal returns. Moreover, individuals are significant net buyers after both negative and positive extreme earnings surprises, consistent with an attention effect, but not with their trades causing PEAD. Finally, we find no indication that trading by individuals explains the concentration of drift at subsequent earnings announcement dates. The paper is available here: "https://ssrn.com/abstract=1120495" https://ssrn.com/abstract=1120495.
This study tests whether naiuml;ve trading by individual investors, or some class of individual investors, causes post-earnings announcement drift (PEAD). Inconsistent with the individual trading hypothesis, individual investor trading fails to subsume any of the power of extreme earnings surprises to predict future abnormal returns. Moreover, individuals are significant net buyers after both negative and positive extreme earnings surprises, consistent with an attention effect, but not with their trades causing PEAD. Finally, we find no indication that trading by individuals explains the concentration of drift at subsequent earnings announcement dates. Presentation slides available at https://ssrn.com/abstract=3228813.
We document that stocks with the strongest prior 12-month returns experience a significant average market-adjusted return of 1.58 percent during the five trading days before their earnings announcements and a significant average market-adjusted return of 1.86 percent in the five trading days afterward. These returns remain significant even after accounting for transactions costs. We empirically test two possible explanations for these anomalous returns. The first is that unexpectedly positive news hits the market over the few days prior to these firms' earnings announcements, and that unexpectedly negative news comes out just afterwards. The second possibility is that stocks with sharp run-ups tend to attract individual investors' attention, and investment dollars, particularly before their earnings announcements. We do not find evidence for an information-based explanation; however, our analysis suggests the possibility that the trading decisions of individual investors are at least partly responsible for the return pattern we observe.
Using TORQ database we investigate the intra-day trading volume reactions to earnings announcements of five trader groups, individuals, institutions, exchange members, program traders, and specialists. The results of this study indicate that institutions are most active in the immediate aftermath of an announcement. Individual investors are slow at the beginning but accumulate heavy volume afterwards and exceed institutional trading volume. We find support for Harris and Raviv (1993) and Admati and Pfleiderer (1988), who respectively argue that divergence of opinion about a public information and portfolio rebalancing cause surges in pre and post-announcement trading volume. Further we find evidence of swift and aggressive trading by informed and sophisticated institutions in the immediate aftermath of the announcement, and delayed, aggressive trading volume quot;overreactionquot; by quot;slowquot; and quot;overconfidentquot; individual investors as documented by Barber and Odean (2000, 2002) and Daniel et al (1998). NYSE specialists provide bulk of the liquidity needs around earnings announcements.
This study focuses on post-earnings-announcement drift in an emerging market and whether it is associated with the trading activity of non-institutional trading around interim earnings announcements. We separate the stock trading activity of Finnish households into five trading classes. Data is all trades executed on the Helsinki Stock Exchange during 1996-2000. Results show that when earnings news contains only moderate price effects no clear evidence is found to show that trading by any of the specified non-institutional trading activity classes is particularly associated with price changes. However, excess buying of passive and intermediate individual investors after extremely negative earnings news seems to intensify the negative post-earnings returns. Also for extremely positive earnings news trading by individuals seems to be related to the post-earnings returns. In that sense post-earnings returns are related with the trading of non-institutional activity classes. However, the net trading of non-institutional investors with different trading activities on the announcement day does not affect the correlation between earnings surprises and subsequent returns. This suggests that the net trading of non-institutional investors' trading activity on the announcement event does not predict subsequent returns. Thus this result is consistent with that of Hirshleifer, Myers, Myers and Teoh (2003).