Investor Psychology and Security Market Under‐ and Overreactions
Open Access
- 17 December 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Finance
- Vol. 53 (6) , 1839-1885
- https://doi.org/10.1111/0022-1082.00077
Abstract
We propose 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. We show that overconfidence implies negative long‐lag autocorrelations, excess volatility, and, when managerial actions are correlated with stock mispricing, public‐event‐based return predictability. Biased self‐attribution adds positive short‐lag autocorrelations (“momentum”), short‐run earnings “drift,” but negative correlation between future returns and long‐term past stock market and accounting performance. The theory also offers several untested implications and implications for corporate financial policy.Keywords
This publication has 90 references indexed in Scilit:
- Aggressiveness and survival of overconfident tradersPublished by Elsevier ,1998
- Ownership and operating performance of companies that go publicJournal of Financial Economics, 1997
- Returns to contrarian investment strategies: Tests of naive expectations hypothesesJournal of Financial Economics, 1997
- What Do Stock Splits Really Signal?Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 1996
- Do Brokerage Analysts' Recommendations Have Investment Value?The Journal of Finance, 1996
- Multifactor Explanations of Asset Pricing AnomaliesThe Journal of Finance, 1996
- The Survival of Noise Traders in Financial MarketsThe Journal of Business, 1991
- Evidence on the Possible Underweighting of Earnings-Related InformationJournal of Accounting Research, 1991
- The Relative Information Content of Accruals and Cash Flows: Combined Evidence at the Earnings Announcement and Annual Report Release DateJournal of Accounting Research, 1986
- Probabilistic forecasting: An experiment related to the stock marketOrganizational Behavior and Human Performance, 1972