Abstract

The authors investigate the relationship between public information and market activities by utilizing event studies and employing data from the stock markets in Mainland China. The major findings are: (1) Public information has significant impact on market activity in Chinese stock markets. (2) Both pre-disclosure and lagged reactions exist or the markets are not efficient. (3) Pre-disclosure of public information by insiders may result in pre-disclosure reaction. And pre-disclosure of information in B-share market is less serious than in A-share market. (4) Lagged reactions of both markets turn out to be over-reactions to public information. (5) Good news is published early and bad news is postponed. (6) Both A-share and B-share markets have different reactions to different news. (7) EPS, book value per share, book-to-market value ratio and ROE have significant impact on accumulative abnormal returns.

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