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Overconfident institutions and their self-attribution bias: evidence from earnings announcements

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posted on 2025-02-17, 02:50 authored by Hsin-I Chou, Mingyi LiMingyi Li, Xiangkang Yin, Jing ZhaoJing Zhao
Institutional demand for a stock before its earnings announcement is negatively related to subsequent returns. The relation is not attributable to the price pressure of institutional demand and is stronger for stocks with higher information asymmetry and/or greater valuation difficulty. These findings support the notion that overconfident institutions misprice stocks. Following announcements, institutions' behavior exhibits the outcome-dependent feature of self-Attribution bias. Whether they become more overconfident and delay their mispricing correction depends on whether earnings news confirms their preannouncement trades. This behavioral bias also offers a new explanation for the well-known post-earnings-Announcement drift.

Funding

This project is supported by Discovery Projects funding provided by the Australian Research Council (DP140100113).

History

Publication Date

2021-08-01

Journal

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis

Volume

56

Issue

5

Pagination

33p. (p. 1738-1770)

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

ISSN

0022-1090

Rights Statement

This article has been published in a revised form in Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, https://doi.org/10.1017/S002210902000037X. This version is free to view and download for private research and study only. Not for re-distribution or re-use. © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Michael G. Foster School of Business, University of Washington.

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