TitleInformation, sophistication, and foreign versus domestic investors' performance
AuthorsChen, Li-Wen
Johnson, Shane A.
Lin, Ji-Chai
Liu, Yu-Jane
AffiliationLouisiana State Univ, EJ Ourso Coll Business, Dept Finance, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA.
Texas A&M Univ, Mays Business Sch, Dept Finance, College Stn, TX 77843 USA.
Peking Univ, Guanghua Sch Management, Dept Finance, Beijing, Peoples R China.
KeywordsForeign and local investors
Home bias
Information asymmetry
Closed-end funds
ABNORMAL RETURNS
PORTFOLIO FLOWS
MARKET
OWNERSHIP
DISCOUNTS
BEHAVIOR
ANALYSTS
TAIWAN
TRADES
Issue Date2009
Publisherjournal of banking finance
CitationJOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE.2009,33,(9),1636-1651.
AbstractUsing an intraday transaction dataset with trader identity, we study foreign and domestic investors' trading activities and investment performance ahead of open-ending events of Taiwanese closed-end funds. Simply buying the funds at a discount and holding until open-ending generates large abnormal returns. All information required to execute this strategy is made public, so the events set up natural experiments to examine how investors trade, holding constant access to information. Foreign investors are net buyers ahead of the open-endings, more than doubling their positions and earning large abnormal returns. Domestic investors are net sellers while the discounts are still large, and forego large abnormal returns. The results suggest that investor sophistication in interpreting the same information is potentially an important determinant of investment performance differences across foreign and domestic investors. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/260325
ISSN0378-4266
DOI10.1016/j.jbankfin.2009.03.011
IndexedSSCI
Appears in Collections:光华管理学院

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