Investor Overconfidence and Trading Volume
Santa Clara University · Brigham Young University
Abstract
The proposition that investors are overconfident about their valuation and trading skills can explain high observed trading volume. With biased self-attribution, the level of investor overconfidence and thus trading volume varies with past returns. We test the trading volume predictions of formal overconfidence models and find that share turnover is positively related to lagged returns for many months. The relationship holds for both market-wide and individual security turnover, which we interpret as evidence of investor overconfidence and the disposition effect, respectively. Security volume is more responsive to market return shocks than to security return shocks, and both relationships are more pronounced…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.78
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 61
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Overconfidence effect
- Volume (thermodynamics)
- Financial economics
- Economics
- Business
- Algorithmic trading
- Monetary economics
- Psychology