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Abnormal trading around common factor pricing models

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of factor-based trading strategies on pricing and volume.Design/methodology/approachThe authors employ a regression discontinuity approach to identify abnormalities in volume or pricing around expected portfolio changes. In addition, the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Review of behavioral finance 2020-10, Vol.12 (4), p.317-334
Main Authors: Wang, Jiexin, Han, Xue, Huang, Emily J, Yost-Bremm, Christopher
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of factor-based trading strategies on pricing and volume.Design/methodology/approachThe authors employ a regression discontinuity approach to identify abnormalities in volume or pricing around expected portfolio changes. In addition, the authors characterize more granular effects on pricing and volume as a result of portfolio re-classification through Fama and Macbeth (1973) regressions.FindingsThe authors find that firms which are predicted to transfer among the factor portfolios of Fama and French (1993) exhibit strong and statistically significant short-term variation in stock price and volume. Short-term returns around the cutoff values comprising SMB and HML tend to be temporarily high if the firm is predicted to move into a long component of a factor-mimicking portfolio, and temporarily low if moving into a short component. Similar results are apparent when examining movement in and out of the 25 size and book-to-market sorted test asset portfolios.Practical implicationsThe use of portfolio strategies formulated on the basis of sorting procedures, while once upon a time a niche market in the portfolio management industry, is now ubiquitous. The results of this study raise interesting methodological questions about the pricing implications arising from these common methodologies.Originality/valueThis study makes a number of contributions. First, it contributes to the idea that the publication or dissemination of trading strategies or – more generally – common portfolio sorting methods, leads to effects on pricing and volume through commonly motivated trading pressure. In other words, recipe-like discoveries of advantageous trading strategies lead to a synthetic creation of demand. Second, by noting that a lot of factor-focused trading activity begins around July and August of each year, the study relates to existing literature which documents seasonal variation in stock returns and volume. The findings raise questions about what guides institutional investors’ portfolio allocation decisions and whether these are optimal in aggregate.
ISSN:1940-5979
1940-5987
DOI:10.1108/RBF-03-2019-0038