Geschreven door studenten die geslaagd zijn Direct beschikbaar na je betaling Online lezen of als PDF Verkeerd document? Gratis ruilen 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Samenvatting

Summary Behavioural Finance - Part 1 & 2 - 18/20

Beoordeling
-
Verkocht
-
Pagina's
10
Geüpload op
22-06-2025
Geschreven in
2024/2025

This contains notes following the book used in part 1, still highly recommend making the exercises. Summary of part 2 is also included, we didnt have to know the last lecture for the exam. You can always ask for proof of my grade, exam is not very hard if you prepare well.

Meer zien Lees minder
Instelling
Vak

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Behavioural finance Chatgpt
PEAD explanation
Definition: Post-Earnings Announcement Drift (PEAD) is the tendency of a
stock's price to drift in the direction of an earnings surprise for an extended
period following the earnings announcement. This phenomenon suggests that
markets are not perfectly efficient, as prices fail to fully incorporate earnings
information immediately.
PEAD occurs because investors either underreact to earnings news or require
time to process and incorporate the information into prices.
Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH): According to EMH, all available
information, including earnings announcements, should be instantaneously
reflected in a stock's price. PEAD contradicts this idea, as the market reacts
sluggishly to earnings surprises, resulting in a drift over days, weeks, or even
months.
Behavioral Explanation: Behavioral biases such as overconfidence,
conservatism bias (underreaction), and limited attention contribute to the
delayed reaction. Investors may underestimate the persistence or implications of
unexpected earnings changes.
 Positive earnings surprises (actual earnings higher than expected) lead to
upward price drifts.
 Negative earnings surprises (actual earnings lower than expected) result in
downward price drifts.
Ball & Brown: Analyzed the unexpected earnings (UE) for a sample of firms and
their stock price movements + Measured UE as the difference between actual
earnings and expected earnings based on prior trends.
 Findings: earnings surprises were significantly correlated with abnormal
stock returns ; the stock price reaction occurred not only immediately upon
announcement but continued for months afterward, leading to a sustained
drift.
 A portion of the information embedded in earnings announcements was
absorbed slowly by the market, resulting in PEAD
Foster, Olsen & Shevlin: extend the findings of Ball & Brown by analyzing the
timing and magnitude of the drift. Focused as well on forecast errors. -> grouped
stocks based on the magnitude of their earnings surprises into deciles ; tracked
CAR for each decile over time.
 Findings: Stocks in the top decile (largest positive surprises) continued to
outperform for up to 60 days post-announcement ; Stocks in the bottom
decile (largest negative surprises) exhibited downward drifts for the same
period,
 The persistence of PEAD indicates inefficiencies in how the market
processes new information, supporting the idea of underreaction.
Bernard & Thomas: examined whether PEAD could be rationalized by risk
factors or is purely a market inefficiency, using Standard Unexpected Earnings
(SUE) = a measure that normalizes earnings surprises based on historical
variability. They classified stocks into portfolios based on SEU and examined the
post-announcement returns for these portfolios over a 90-day period.

,  Findings: the drift persisted for 90 days, with the strongest effect for high
SUE portfolios ; Risk-adjusted returns failed to explain the drift, implicating
behavioral factors like underreaction
 PEAD was not driven by risk compensation but by cognitive biases and
slow information diffusion.
Abarbanell & Bernard: investigated whether fundamental analysis could
anticipate PEAD and its investment implications <=> examined whether earnings
could predict future performance
 Findings: earnings surprises are often persistent—unexpected earnings in
one quarter predict unexpected earnings in subsequent quarters ;
Investors who exploited PEAD by identifying high-persistence stocks could
achieve abnormal returns.
 E.g. a company with a history of exceeding earnings expectations is likely
to do so again. By investing early, investors could capitalize on the drift
Longevity of the Drift: influenced by
 Market size: small firms exhibit longer and stronger drifts
 Earnings Surprise Magnitude: larger surprised tend to have more
pronounced and longer-lasting drifts
 Market conditions: during periods of market stress or high uncertainty, the
drift may extend further as investors delay reactions.



Chatgpt part 1, chapter 1
Mathematical Preliminaries:
Sets: introduces the mathematical foundations of set theory, crucial for
understanding choice theory.
Set Definition: A collection of distinct elements, e.g., A={a1,a2,a3}.
Subset: A smaller collection within a set, e.g., A′={a1,a2}⊂A.
Intersection: Common elements between two sets, A∩B = {x : x ∈ A and x ∈ B}
Union: All unique elements from two sets combined, A∪B = {x : x ∈ A or x ∈ B}
Example: A={a1,a2,a3} and B={b1,b2,a3}.
 A∩B={a3}: Common elements.
 A∪B={a1,a2,a3,b1,b2}: Combined elements
Cartesian product: A×B={(a,b):a∈A and b∈B} -> pairs every element from A with
every element from B. For example:
If A={a1,a2} and B={b1,b2}: -> A×B={(a1,b1),(a2,b1),(a1,b2),(a2,b2)} , in
general: A×B≠B×A
 This understanding of Cartesian products sets the stage for discussing
relations between elements, which is essential for preference relations
Relation xRy: introduces binary relations, which are subsets of the Cartesian
product of a set with itself.
Binary Relation: A subset R⊆X×X, where X is a non-empty set. If (x,y)∈R(x, y),
we say xRy, meaning x is related to y.
Example: If X={x1,x2,x3}, then X×X has 32=9 elements. Define R={(x1,x1),
(x2,x2),(x3,x3)}, which represents a relation where each element relates to itself
(reflexivity).

Geschreven voor

Instelling
Studie
Vak

Documentinformatie

Geüpload op
22 juni 2025
Aantal pagina's
10
Geschreven in
2024/2025
Type
SAMENVATTING

Onderwerpen

$12.54
Krijg toegang tot het volledige document:

Verkeerd document? Gratis ruilen Binnen 14 dagen na aankoop en voor het downloaden kun je een ander document kiezen. Je kunt het bedrag gewoon opnieuw besteden.
Geschreven door studenten die geslaagd zijn
Direct beschikbaar na je betaling
Online lezen of als PDF


Ook beschikbaar in voordeelbundel

Maak kennis met de verkoper

Seller avatar
De reputatie van een verkoper is gebaseerd op het aantal documenten dat iemand tegen betaling verkocht heeft en de beoordelingen die voor die items ontvangen zijn. Er zijn drie niveau’s te onderscheiden: brons, zilver en goud. Hoe beter de reputatie, hoe meer de kwaliteit van zijn of haar werk te vertrouwen is.
dennisv1 Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Volgen Je moet ingelogd zijn om studenten of vakken te kunnen volgen
Verkocht
13
Lid sinds
2 jaar
Aantal volgers
0
Documenten
6
Laatst verkocht
3 weken geleden

1.0

1 beoordelingen

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
1

Recent door jou bekeken

Waarom studenten kiezen voor Stuvia

Gemaakt door medestudenten, geverifieerd door reviews

Kwaliteit die je kunt vertrouwen: geschreven door studenten die slaagden en beoordeeld door anderen die dit document gebruikten.

Niet tevreden? Kies een ander document

Geen zorgen! Je kunt voor hetzelfde geld direct een ander document kiezen dat beter past bij wat je zoekt.

Betaal zoals je wilt, start meteen met leren

Geen abonnement, geen verplichtingen. Betaal zoals je gewend bent via iDeal of creditcard en download je PDF-document meteen.

Student with book image

“Gekocht, gedownload en geslaagd. Zo makkelijk kan het dus zijn.”

Alisha Student

Bezig met je bronvermelding?

Maak nauwkeurige citaten in APA, MLA en Harvard met onze gratis bronnengenerator.

Bezig met je bronvermelding?

Veelgestelde vragen