Abstract

This study analyzes the effect of overnight returns on subsequent stock market returns and investigates whether they do capture investor sentiment in the Korean stock market. Recent study showed that overnight returns are similar to existing sentiment measures, and, thus, are suitable for measuring firm-specific investor sentiment in the U.S. market. Similarly, we found that, for firms in the Korean market, high overnight returns are followed by higher stock returns in the short term (i.e., two or three trading days) but lower stock returns in the long term. However, these effects do not differ for different types of firms (i.e., hard-to-value firms), whereas classical firm-specific sentiment indicators capture these differences. Overall, we found that overnight returns do not truly measure firm-specific investor sentiment in the Korean stock market even though they are partially related to investor sentiment.

Highlights

  • The classical asset pricing framework, which is based on the concepts of investor rationality, optimization, and market efficiency, governs economic studies, the recent financial crises and episodes of irrational exuberance bring the validity of rational asset pricing models into question

  • This study investigates the relationship between overnight returns and investor sentiment in the Korean Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) market

  • This study investigates whether overnight returns truly measure investor sentiment in the KOSPI market

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Summary

Introduction

The classical asset pricing framework, which is based on the concepts of investor rationality, optimization, and market efficiency, governs economic studies, the recent financial crises and episodes of irrational exuberance bring the validity of rational asset pricing models into question. Both academics and market practitioners are beginning to focus on investor irrationality and behavior to explain market anomalies and abnormal asset price movements. Kim, and Yang (2017 [20]) and Yang, Ryu, and Ryu (2017 [21]) extended these firm-level sentiment indicators to analyze the behavior of the Korean stock market In these recent studies, the new sentiment measures are called “firm-specific” sentiment indicators

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