Retail Investor Trading and Market Reactions to Earnings Announcements

dc.contributor.author Friedman, Henry
dc.contributor.author Zeng, Zitong
dc.date.accessioned 2021-11-12T18:44:40Z
dc.date.available 2021-11-12T18:44:40Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.description.abstract This paper uses holdings and outage data from Robinhood and transaction-level data from U.S. exchanges to examine how retail investors affect the pricing of public earnings information. We find that retail trader activity is associated with prices that are more responsive to earnings surprises, and earnings announcements affected by seemingly random retail trading outages experience weaker price responses. These results are concentrated in firms that are smaller and have less robust informational environments. Additional evidence shows that the retail activity is associated with more volatile returns during the earnings announcement window, which can slow the incorporation of public information and contribute to larger bid-ask spreads. Overall, our results suggest that retail investors can facilitate the incorporation of public information into price over the 2-day earnings announcement window despite the potential to increase volatility and impose risk on other market participants.
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10125/76946
dc.subject Retail investors
dc.subject Earnings announcements
dc.subject Stock returns
dc.subject Robinhood
dc.title Retail Investor Trading and Market Reactions to Earnings Announcements
dc.type.dcmi Text
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