Information Costs and Liquidity Effects from Changes in the Dow Jones Industrial Average List
- 1 March 1995
- journal article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis
- Vol. 30 (1) , 135
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2331257
Abstract
We examine the stock market effect of changes in the composition of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA). Unlike S&P 500 listing studies, we find that the price and the trading volume of newly listed DJIA firms are unaffected. We attribute this result to a lack of index fund rebalancing, since index trading is limited for most of our sample period and index funds mimic the S&P 500, not the DJIA. Firms removed from the index, however, experience significant price declines. We consider information signaling, price pressure, imperfect substitutes, and information cost/liquidity explanations for these asymmetric findings. The evidence is consistent with the information cost/liquidity explanation, which holds that investors demand a premium for higher trading costs and for holding securities that have relatively less available information.Keywords
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: