Abstract

This paper aims to study predictive ability of consumer sentiment of individual stocks. We consider two proxies for sentiment. One is explicit (Index of Consumer Sentiment, ICS), second is implicit (Broad Market Indicator, SP contrarily no such relation exists between explicit sentiment indicator and stocks. We find causation from ICS to S&PBSE500. Both the sentiment indicators have causal relation with aggressive stocks but not with defensive stocks. Result show that only ICS has short-term predictive power of aggressive stocks. We find significant negative relation between consumer sentiment and aggressive stock returns in the following month. This implies high consumer optimism in current month results in price shrink of aggressive stocks in following month. We conclude that implicit sentiment indicator has no predictive ability of stocks and explicit sentiment indicator is able to predict only small number of aggressive stocks. We suggest investors not to follow sentiment indicators blindly because these indicators predictive ability is very limited that too with select aggressive stocks. We find aggressive stocks have high volatility and gain investor attention during optimistic and pessimistic market conditions.

Highlights

  • Equity stocks investors can be categorized into rational, arbitrageurs, and noise traders

  • We posit that sentiment indicators can help predict stock prices in short-term

  • This paper contributes to the literature by addressing the causal relationship between investor sentiment and individual stock returns in the context of developing economy

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Summary

Introduction

Equity stocks investors can be categorized into rational, arbitrageurs, and noise traders. Rational investors expect nominal return that is in excess of risk that they bear. They make investment decision depending on stock return, risk, and their risk appetite. Arbitrageurs search for undervalued or overvalued stocks in the market and buy or sell . Noise traders trade on noise in the market. Their investment decision depends on optimism and pessimism about the market movements. They pump funds into the market to make quick money. In anticipation of abnormal returns, noise traders behave irrationally. Noise traders pay much attention to sentiment rather than fundamentals. Sentiment whether positive or negative may influence by many factors at firm level, macro level or global level

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