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Extreme volumes and expected stock returns: Evidence from China's stock market
Affiliation:1. Department of Finance and Accounting, NUS Business School, National University of Singapore, Business Link, Singapore 117592, Singapore;2. School of Finance, Renmin University of China, Beijing 100872, People''s Republic of China;1. School of Economics, Singapore Management University, Singapore;2. Centro de Investigación Económica, ITAM, Ave. Camino Santa Teresa 930, Mexico, DF 10700, Mexico;1. Global Industrial Development, Scania CV AB, SE-151 87 Södertälje, SWEDEN;2. Department of Engineering Science, University West, SE-461 86 Trollhättan, SWEDEN;3. School of Science and Technology, Örebro University, SE-701 82 Örebro, SWEDEN
Abstract:We examine the relation between extreme trading volumes and expected returns for individual stocks traded on the Shanghai Stock Exchange and the Shenzhen Stock Exchange over the July 1994–December 2000 interval. Contrasted with the evidence obtained from the US data [J. Finance 56 (2001) 877], our results show that stocks experiencing extremely high (low) volumes are associated with low (high) subsequent returns. Moreover, this extreme volume–return relation significantly co-varies with security characteristics like past stock performance, firm size, and book-to-market values. In particular, stocks with extreme volumes are related to poorer performance if they are past winners, large firms, and glamour stocks than if they are past losers, small firms, and value stocks, respectively. These results are robust to both daily and weekly samples as well as stock exchange sub-samples. Although the liquidity premium hypothesis of Amihud and Mendelson [J. Financ. Econ. 17 (1986) 223] provides a partial explanation for the extreme volume–return relation, our results fit better the behavioral hypothesis of Baker and Stein [J. Financ. Mark. 7 (2004) 271].
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