The Market Reaction to Stock Splits - Evidence from Germany

The Market Reaction to Stock Splits - Evidence from Germany
Author: Christian Wulff
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2003
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper investigates the market reaction to stock splits, using a set of German firms. Similar to the findings in the U.S., I find significant positive abnormal returns around boththe announcement and the execution day of German stock splits. I also observe an increase in return variance and in liquidity after the ex-day. Apparently, legal restrictions strongly limit the ability of German companies to use a stock split for signaling. I find that abnormal returns around the announcement day are consistently much lower in Germany than in the U.S. Further, I find that abnormal returns around the announcement day are not related to changes in liquidity, but (negatively) to firm size, thus lending support to the neglected firm hypothesis. On the methodological side the effect of thin trading on event study results is examined. Using trade-to-trade returns increases the significance of abnormal returns, but the difference between alternative return measurement methods is relatively small in short event periods. Thus, the observed market reaction cannot be attributed to measurement problemscaused by thin trading.

The Market Reaction to Stock Split Announcements

The Market Reaction to Stock Split Announcements
Author: Alon Kalay
Publisher:
Total Pages: 39
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

We re-examine whether the abnormal returns around stock split announcements can be explained by an information hypothesis. Our evidence establishes a link between the abnormal returns and future earnings growth. Analysts revise earnings forecasts by 2.2-2.5% around split announcements, and this revision is significantly larger than that for matched firms. We further show that the earnings information in a split likely arises from the fact that splitting firms experience less mean reversion in their earnings growth relative to matched firms. Consistent with an earnings information hypothesis, the analyst revision and the abnormal returns are stronger for firms with more opaque information environments, and the cross-sectional variation in analyst revisions is related to the variation in abnormal returns.

A stock split event study using sector-indices vs. CDAX and some extensions of the standard market model

A stock split event study using sector-indices vs. CDAX and some extensions of the standard market model
Author: David Bosch
Publisher: GRIN Verlag
Total Pages: 23
Release: 2011-08-03
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 364097543X

Seminar paper from the year 2009 in the subject Business economics - Banking, Stock Exchanges, Insurance, Accounting, grade: 1,3, Humboldt-University of Berlin (Institut für Bank und Börsenwesen), course: Seminar of Banking and Financial Markets, language: English, abstract: There are many theories in literature which try to examine possible reasons for a stock split. While a stock split seems to be just a cosmetic corporate event, it is often claimed that the motivation to carry out a stock split is to signal future profitability or to bring the share price to a preferred trading-range. Additionally there are many papers published, where the impact of a stock split on liquidity and institutional ownership is examined. Some results of these studies are briefly discussed in the Literature Review. Most researchers calculate their abnormal returns with the market model by using the most common index in their economy. In this paper, I check whether sector-indices fit the data better than the CDAX does. In some cases, the sector-indices describe the stock returns better. Another topic of event studies that researchers of the finance area often deal with is whether the assumptions of the market model established by Fama, Fisher, Jensen and Roll (1969) do hold for daily stock returns. I will discuss some of the weaknesses when applied to financial time series and I present two models which can improve the efficiency of the model.

Market Reaction Around the Stock Splits and Bonus Issues

Market Reaction Around the Stock Splits and Bonus Issues
Author: Satyajit Dhar
Publisher:
Total Pages: 24
Release: 2008
Genre:
ISBN:

It is often argued that stock splits and bonus issues are purely cosmetic events. However, many studies have found numerous stock market effects associated with bonus issues and stock splits. This paper examines the effects of these two types of events for the Indian stock market. We use the event study methodologies. The abnormal returns are calculated using the Capital Asset Pricing Model and then t-tests are conducted to test the significance. Consistent with the existence literatures, the two events are associated with significantly positive announcement effect. For bonus issues, the abnormal returns were about 1.8% and for stock splits, it was about 0.8%. On a whole, the paper finds evidence of semi-strong form efficiency in the Indian stock market.

Contemporary Research on Business and Management

Contemporary Research on Business and Management
Author: Siska Noviaristanti
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 379
Release: 2020-09-15
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1000260569

This book contains selected papers presented at the 3rd International Seminar of Contemporary Research on Business and Management (ISCRBM 2019), which was organized by the Alliance of Indonesian Master of Management Program (APMMI) and held in Jakarta, Indonesia on 27-29th November 2019. It was hosted by the Master of Management Program Indonesia University and co-hosts Airlangga University, Sriwijaya University, Trunojoyo University of Madura, and Telkom University, and supported by Telkom Indonesia and Triputra. The seminar aimed to provide a forum for leading scholars, academics, researchers, and practitioners in business and management area to reflect on current issues, challenges and opportunities, and to share the latest innovative research and best practice. This seminar brought together participants to exchange ideas on the future development of management disciplines: human resources, marketing, operations, finance, strategic management and entrepreneurship.

Effects of Government Regulations on Financial Performance

Effects of Government Regulations on Financial Performance
Author: Dr. John Ntoiti, Dr. Samuel Kanga Odalo, Batista J. Mariko
Publisher: AJPO Journals USA LLC
Total Pages: 127
Release: 2022-02-17
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9914745571

TOPICS IN THE BOOK Contribution of Government Regulations to Financial Distress Facing Local Authorities in Kenya Influence of Interest Rate on the Financial Performance of Agricultural Firms Listed at the Nairobi Securities Exchange Influence of Liquidity on the Financial Performance of Agricultural Firms Listed at the Nairobi Securities Exchange Effect of New Information from Rights Issue Announcement on Share Prices of Firm’s Listed on the Nairobi Security Exchange Effect of Volume of Shares Traded on Share Prices of Firm’s Listed on Nairobi Security Exchange Effect of Information Adjustment Time on Share Prices for Firm’s Listed on the Nairobi Security Exchange

Acquisitions by Emerging Multinational Corporations

Acquisitions by Emerging Multinational Corporations
Author: Johannes Distler
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 451
Release: 2017-07-27
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3658191120

This thesis analyzes the motivation and performance of 403 acquisitions made by emerging multinational corporations (EMNCs) in Western Europe and North America between 1994 and 2013. The findings indicate that most EMNCs were motivated to acquire in order to obtain access to the upstream and downstream know-how of their target firms. In addition, the thesis' event study results demonstrate that EMNCs on average generated value for their shareholders with their acquisitions over short periods around acquisition announcement. This result is particularly significant since similar studies on buying firms from developed markets have frequently come to the conclusion that acquirers destroy shareholder value.