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Are individual investors affected by attention? : Evidence from the earning announcement effect in China

Xunan Feng (School of Finance, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, Chengdu, China)
Na Hu (School of Finance, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, Chengdu, China)

China Finance Review International

ISSN: 2044-1398

Article publication date: 12 August 2014

982

Abstract

Purpose

Based on the theory of limited attention, the purpose of this paper is to investigate whether the investor behavior is influenced by attention, using the sample from earning announcement in China.

Design/methodology/approach

Empirical research using the earning announcement data in China. Specifically, the authors use the sample from 2005 to 2010 in listed A-share firms with earning announcements in Shanghai and Shenzhen stock market. Panel data regressions are used with Newey and West (1987) to correct for the potential heteroskedasticity and autocorrelation. The empirical results strongly support the hypothesis that limited attention impact investor behavior in China.

Findings

The authors find that the immediate price and volume reaction to earning surprise is much weaker and post-announcement drift is much stronger when a greater number of firms make earning announcements on the same day. The authors explain these findings mainly from behavioral bias. When investors process multiple information signals immediately or perform multiple objects simultaneously, their attention will be allocated selectively due to cognitive constraints. Such limited attention causes severe underreaction to immediate earnings announcement, therefore leads to mispricing abnormal related to public accounting information. In the long-run, the market adjusted and there is post-announcement drift.

Research limitations/implications

Consistent with Hirshleifer et al. (2009), the findings in this study indicate that individual investors’ behaviors are influenced by their limited attention in China. The results are different from Yu and Wang (2010) conclusions that same-day concentrated announcement help investors and facilitate information dissemination in China. The findings are explained by the investor distraction hypothesis proposed by Hirshleifer et al. (2009) that investor distraction causes market underreaction.

Practical implications

The arrival of simultaneously extraneous earning information cause market prices and trading volume to react slowly to the relevant news about a firm because competing information signals distract investor from a given firm, causing market price to underreact to relevant news. These finding help us understand investor behavior and the impact of limited attention on security market.

Social implications

Investor limited attention not only affects their stock-buying behavior, but also has an important impact on the efficiency of security market. Specifically, limited attention drive immediate underreaction to earning announcement and the post-earning announcement drift, especially when a greater number of same-day earning announcements are made by other firms.

Originality/value

Limited attention affects security market in China.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

JEL Classifications — G35, C51, L21

Feng acknowledges financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (71302049) and the Shanghai College Foundation for Excellent Young Teachers of China (37-0129-12-002).

Citation

Feng, X. and Hu, N. (2014), "Are individual investors affected by attention? : Evidence from the earning announcement effect in China", China Finance Review International, Vol. 4 No. 3, pp. 289-304. https://doi.org/10.1108/CFRI-09-2013-0114

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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