We examine the suitability of using overnight returns to measure firm-specific investor sentiment by analyzing whether they possess characteristics expected of a sentiment measure. We document short-term overnight-return persistence, consistent with existing evidence of short-term persistence in the share demand of sentiment-influenced investors. We find that short-term persistence is stronger for harder-to-value firms, consistent with existing evidence that sentiment plays a larger role for such firms. We show that stocks with high (low) overnight returns underperform (outperform) over the longer term, consistent with prior evidence of temporary sentiment-driven mispricing. Overall, our evidence supports using overnight returns to measure firm-specific sentiment.
CITATION STYLE
Aboody, D., Even-Tov, O., Lehavy, R., & Trueman, B. (2018). Overnight Returns and Firm-Specific Investor Sentiment. Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 53(2), 485–505. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022109017000989
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.