Abstract

This study offers further evidence of the holiday effect on excess stock returns and volatility, and additional insights into its impact on the amusement park and attractions industry in the United States. The generalized auto-regressive conditional heteroscedasticity (GARCH) model and dummy variables are adopted to investigate pre- and post-holiday excess returns and volatility. Empirical results suggest the following: (1) both excess returns and excess volatility happen more frequently in pre-holidays than post-holidays; (2) the frequency of excess volatility is higher than excess returns for the holiday effect; and (3) nearly all significant excess volatilities are negative. We, therefore, conclude that the holiday effect exists in publicly traded amusement and theme parks.

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