Abstract

This study provides evidence regarding the effects of online trading on stock market reactions to quarterly earnings announcements. We test for differences in stock price and volume reactions to quarterly earnings announcements between a period with a significant amount of online trading (1996-1999) and a period without online trading (1992-1995). We conjecture that online trading has increased the proportion of naive investors in the market. Based on noisy rational expectations models of trade, we predict that this will result in larger stock price and trading volume reactions to earnings announcements. We find strong evidence in support of these predictions. The stock price results suggest that the advent of online trading has decreased average prior precision and the trading volume results suggest that online trading has increased differential belief revisions around earnings announcements. An analysis of the relation between volume reactions and price reactions in both periods suggests that the increase in differential belief revisions is primarily due to an increase in the differential interpretation of earnings announcements in the online trading period. Our findings are relevant for assessing the validity of concerns about online trading expressed by regulators and the validity of theoretical models of trade with asymmetrically informed investors.

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