scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Investor Sentiment in the Stock Market

TLDR
In this article, the authors develop a top-down approach to measure investor sentiment and quantify its effects, and show that it is quite possible to measure sentiment and that waves of sentiment have clearly discernible, important, and regular effects on individual firms and on the stock market as a whole.
Abstract
Investor sentiment, defined broadly, is a belief about future cash flows and investment risks that is not justified by the facts at hand. The question is no longer whether investor sentiment affects stock prices, but how to measure investor sentiment and quantify its effects. One approach is "bottom up," using biases in individual investor psychology, such as overconfidence, representativeness, and conservatism, to explain how individual investors underreact or overreact to past returns or fundamentals. The investor sentiment approach that we develop in this paper is, by contrast, distinctly "top down" and macroeconomic: we take the origin of investor sentiment as exogenous and focus on its empirical effects. We show that it is quite possible to measure investor sentiment and that waves of sentiment have clearly discernible, important, and regular effects on individual firms and on the stock market as a whole. The top-down approach builds on the two broader and more irrefutable assumptions of behavioral finance -- sentiment and the limits to arbitrage -- to explain which stocks are likely to be most affected by sentiment. In particular, stocks that are difficult to arbitrage or to value are most affected by sentiment.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

In Search of Attention

TL;DR: In this article, a new and direct measure of investor attention using search frequency in Google (SVI) is proposed, which captures investor attention in a more timely fashion and likely measures the attention of retail investors, and an increase in SVI predicts higher stock prices in the next 2 weeks and an eventual price reversal within the year.
Journal ArticleDOI

The short of it

Journal ArticleDOI

Maxing Out: Stocks as Lotteries and the Cross-Section of Expected Returns

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the significance of extreme positive returns in the cross-sectional pricing of stocks and find a negative and significant relation between the maximum daily return over the past one month (MAX) and expected stock returns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Time series momentum.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors document significant time series momentum in equity index, currency, commodity, and bond futures for each of the 58 liquid instruments they consider, and find persistence in returns for one to 12 months that partially reverses over longer horizons, consistent with sentiment theories of initial under reaction and delayed over-reaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Policy Uncertainty and Corporate Investment

TL;DR: In this article, a news-based index of policy uncertainty was used to find a negative relationship between firm-level capital investment and the aggregate level of uncertainty associated with future policy and regulatory outcomes.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Noise Trader Risk in Financial Markets

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a simple overlapping generations model of an asset market in which irrational noise traders with erroneous stochastic beliefs both affect prices and earn higher expected returns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Business conditions and expected returns on stocks and bonds

TL;DR: For example, this paper found that expected returns on common stocks and long-term bonds contain a term or maturity premium that has a clear business-cycle pattern (low near peaks, high near troughs).
Journal ArticleDOI

Investor Psychology and Security Market Under- and Overreactions

TL;DR: The authors proposed a theory of securities market under- and overreactions based on two well-known psychological biases: investor overconfidence about the precision of private information; and biased self-attribution, which causes asymmetric shifts in investors' confidence as a function of their investment outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investor sentiment and the cross-section of stock returns

TL;DR: The authors study how investor sentiment affects the cross-section of stock returns and find that when sentiment is low, subsequent returns are relatively high for small stocks, young stocks, high volatility stocks, unprofitable stocks, non-dividend-paying stocks, extreme growth stocks, and distressed stocks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk, uncertainty, and divergence of opinion

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the implications of a market with restricted short selling in which investors have differing estimates of the returns from investing in a risky security, and explain the very low returns on the stocks in the highest risk classes, the poor long run results on new issues of stocks, the presence of discounts from net value for closed end investment companies, and the lower than predicted rates of return for stocks with high systematic risk.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
Sentiment in the stock market?

Investor sentiment in the stock market can be measured and has discernible effects on individual firms and the stock market as a whole.