TY - JOUR
T1 - Momentum, Reversals, and Investor Clientele
AU - Chui, Andy C.W.
AU - Subrahmanyam, Avanidhar
AU - Titman, Sheridan
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to Alex Edmans (the editor), an anonymous referee, and an Associate Editor for insightful and constructive suggestions. We also thank Shantanu Banerjee, Heiner Beckmeyer, Judson Caskey, Zhi Da, Alex Edmans, Ning Gao, Marko Gränitz, Valentin Haddad, Eirini Konstantinidi, Lars Lochstoer, Tyler Muir, Stavros Panageas, Eduardo Schwartz, Alex Taylor, Hang Wang, Teresa Wang, K.C. John Wei, and participants in seminars at Baruch College, UCLA, the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, the University of Texas at Austin, and the 2021 FSU-Suntrust Conference, the 2021 Colorado/Texas Research Idea Conference, the 2021 French Finance Association conference, the 2021 Behavioral Finance Working Group Conference, as well as the Virtual Finance Seminar series organized by the Universities of Bristol, Exeter, Lancaster, and Manchester, for valuable comments. We also appreciate Robert Stambaugh for making publicly available the CH-3 risk factors used in this study, and Miguel Ferreira and Pedro Matos for the program used in to access the FactSet data. We thank Man Hong Chan for his excellent research assistance. Andy C.W. Chui acknowledges financial support from the Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China (GRF591413).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Finance Association. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: [email protected].
PY - 2022/3/1
Y1 - 2022/3/1
N2 - Different share classes on the same firms provide a natural experiment to explore how investor clienteles affect momentum and short-term reversals. Domestic retail investors have a greater presence in Chinese A shares and foreign institutions are relatively more prevalent in B shares. These differences result from currency conversion restrictions and mandated investment quotas. We find that only B shares exhibit momentum and earnings drift and only A shares exhibit monthly reversals. Institutional ownership strengthens momentum in B shares. These patterns accord with a setting where short-term reversals (which represent inventory risk premia) prevail in a market dominated by noise traders and momentum prevails in markets where noise traders are less prevalent relative to informed investors who underreact to fundamental signals. Overall, our findings confirm that clienteles matter in generating stock return predictability from past returns.
AB - Different share classes on the same firms provide a natural experiment to explore how investor clienteles affect momentum and short-term reversals. Domestic retail investors have a greater presence in Chinese A shares and foreign institutions are relatively more prevalent in B shares. These differences result from currency conversion restrictions and mandated investment quotas. We find that only B shares exhibit momentum and earnings drift and only A shares exhibit monthly reversals. Institutional ownership strengthens momentum in B shares. These patterns accord with a setting where short-term reversals (which represent inventory risk premia) prevail in a market dominated by noise traders and momentum prevails in markets where noise traders are less prevalent relative to informed investors who underreact to fundamental signals. Overall, our findings confirm that clienteles matter in generating stock return predictability from past returns.
KW - Anomalies
KW - behavioral finance
KW - G11
KW - G14
KW - liquidity
KW - market efficiency
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85127563607&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/rof/rfac010
DO - 10.1093/rof/rfac010
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85127563607
SN - 1572-3097
VL - 26
SP - 217
EP - 255
JO - Review of Finance
JF - Review of Finance
IS - 2
ER -