TY - JOUR
T1 - Daily Winners and Losers in the Korean Stock Market
AU - Kang, Jangkoo
AU - Yun, Jaesun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Korean Securities Association. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/8
Y1 - 2020/8
N2 - In their working paper, Kumar, Ruenzi, and Ungeheuer (KRU) document that stocks ranked as daily winners or losers in the previous month underperform unranked stocks during the month after the ranking. KRU explain that the ranked stocks experience a large increase in investor attention, which leads to temporary overpricing and subsequent under-performance. Following KRU, we investigate whether the same effect exists in the Korean stock market and find a robust daily winners and losers effect. First, stocks that were both daily winners and losers in a given month underperform those that were neither daily winners nor losers during the following months. Second, stocks that were never a daily winner or loser during the previous month do not exhibit the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle or the MAX effect. Moreover, the underperformance of ranked stocks is robust after controlling for the idiosyncratic volatility and the MAX effect. We suggest that the overpricing caused by excessive attention to daily winners and losers may be the main driver of the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle and the MAX effect. Lastly, we find that retail investors buy daily winners and losers, while both institutional investors and foreign investors decrease trades in the ranked stocks.
AB - In their working paper, Kumar, Ruenzi, and Ungeheuer (KRU) document that stocks ranked as daily winners or losers in the previous month underperform unranked stocks during the month after the ranking. KRU explain that the ranked stocks experience a large increase in investor attention, which leads to temporary overpricing and subsequent under-performance. Following KRU, we investigate whether the same effect exists in the Korean stock market and find a robust daily winners and losers effect. First, stocks that were both daily winners and losers in a given month underperform those that were neither daily winners nor losers during the following months. Second, stocks that were never a daily winner or loser during the previous month do not exhibit the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle or the MAX effect. Moreover, the underperformance of ranked stocks is robust after controlling for the idiosyncratic volatility and the MAX effect. We suggest that the overpricing caused by excessive attention to daily winners and losers may be the main driver of the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle and the MAX effect. Lastly, we find that retail investors buy daily winners and losers, while both institutional investors and foreign investors decrease trades in the ranked stocks.
KW - Idiosyncratic Volatility Puzzle
KW - Investor Attention
KW - MAX Effect
KW - Retail Investors
KW - Stock Rankings
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85150526336&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.26845/KJFS.2020.08.49.4.565
DO - 10.26845/KJFS.2020.08.49.4.565
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85150526336
SN - 2005-8187
VL - 49
SP - 565
EP - 588
JO - Korean Journal of Financial Studies
JF - Korean Journal of Financial Studies
IS - 4
ER -