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Overreaction effect: evidence from an emerging market (Shanghai stock market)

Krishna Reddy (Postgraduate Business, Faculty of Health, Education and Environment, Rotorua, New Zealand)
Muhammad Ali Jibran Qamar (Department of Management Sciences, COMSATS University Islamabad - Lahore Campus, Lahore, Pakistan)
Nawazish Mirza (La Rochelle Business School, La Rochelle, France)
Fangwei Shi (School of Accounting, Finance and Economics, Waikato Management School, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand)

International Journal of Managerial Finance

ISSN: 1743-9132

Article publication date: 24 August 2020

Issue publication date: 29 April 2021

673

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of the study is to examine overreaction effect in the Chinese stock market after the global financial crisis (GFC) of 2007 for all the stocks listed in Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) Composite 50 index.

Design/methodology/approach

To capture overreaction effect in the stock listed at SSE 50 Index, a time series analysis of average cumulative abnormal return within a unified framework is applied for the period of January 2009 to December 2015. From these loser and winner portfolios, contrarian strategy is applied to build arbitrage portfolio, which is the difference of mean reversions between loser and winner portfolios. The portfolio construction is based on a 12-month formation period and 6-month testing period for intermediate-term analysis and. for short-term analysis, 6 month formation and 3 month testing periods. The authors also applied regression analysis to test a return reversal effect for the sampled period.

Findings

Results show that contrarian strategy yields positive excess returns for the arbitrage portfolio for most of the testing periods. The intermediate baseline case shows the arbitrage portfolio producing an average excess return of 14.1%, while even the short-term one produces 4%, which is statistically significant at the 5% level. The study finds asymmetrical overreactions in the SSE especially for loser portfolios. The biggest winner and loser portfolios follow the mean reversal effect. Moreover, before-after test for the biggest winner and loser portfolios shows that the losers recovered and beat the market immediately.

Practical implications

The study could benefit government, policy makers and regulators by studying how presence of more individual investors than institutional investors of China stock market leads to more irrational decisions giving rise to volatility. The regulators could build favourable policies for institutional investors to give them incentive to invest more than individual investors through which market volatility could be controlled.

Originality/value

This research contributes to market behaviour research, showing how working under hypotheses of overreaction; gains can be made with contrarian investment strategy through arbitrage portfolios. The authors provide specific additional support for the short and medium-term overreaction in the SSE for the period 2009–2015 using regression analysis.

Contribution to Impact

This research contributes to market behaviour research, showing how working under hypotheses of overreaction; gains can be made with contrarian investment strategy through arbitrage portfolios. We provide specific additional support for the short and medium-term overreaction in the SSE for the period 2009–2015 using regression analysis.

Keywords

Citation

Reddy, K., Qamar, M.A.J., Mirza, N. and Shi, F. (2021), "Overreaction effect: evidence from an emerging market (Shanghai stock market)", International Journal of Managerial Finance, Vol. 17 No. 3, pp. 416-437. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJMF-01-2019-0033

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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