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Erschienen in: Asia-Pacific Financial Markets 3/2021

01.02.2021 | Original Research

The Short-Selling Hypothesis of Weekend Effect and T + 1 Trading Mechanism

verfasst von: Xiao Li, Bin Liu

Erschienen in: Asia-Pacific Financial Markets | Ausgabe 3/2021

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Abstract

Utilizing a difference-in-difference regression model, we conduct cross-sectional and time-series analysis to explore effect of short sales on the weekend effect in the Chinese stock market, which uses a T + 1 trading mechanism. Our empirical results show that (1) significant negative returns associated with the weekend effect in the Chinese stock market before short selling was allowed, but the effect becomes almost insignificant when the short selling ban was lifted; (2) a significant increase in the returns associated with the weekend effect of shortable stocks from the period before to the period after they became eligible for short-selling; and (3) the change in the weekend effect is greater for more volatile stocks than for less volatile stocks. Our findings support the short-selling hypothesis of the weekend effect.

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Fußnoten
1
Despite the fact that the weekend effect is defined in various ways (Keim and Stambaugh, 1984; Rogalski, 1984; Lakonishok and Smidt, 1988; Chen and Singal, 2003; Gu, 2004), the common intention is to capture the difference in stock returns between Monday and other days.
 
2
A Friday refers to the last trading day of the week, whether it is actually a Thursday or a Friday; similarly, a Monday refers to the first trading day of the week, whether it is a Monday or a Tuesday.
 
3
Our sample period covers 4 January 2000 to 29 December 2017. During the first 10 years of the Chinese stock market, there were so many policy changes that further shorten the sample period available. The Shanghai Stock Exchange opened officially on 19 December 1990; the Shenzhen Stock Exchange opened officially on 3 July 1991. The T + 1 trading rule began in 1 January 1995; the price limit regulation was implemented in 16 December 1996.
 
4
Reinvested dividends are included in the returns.
 
5
Sorting the shortable stocks only by stock code doesn’t change the empirical results.
 
6
If the shortable stocks were sorted only by stock code, the coefficient associated with Period × Shortable would be insignificantly different from zero in all regression specifications.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
The Short-Selling Hypothesis of Weekend Effect and T + 1 Trading Mechanism
verfasst von
Xiao Li
Bin Liu
Publikationsdatum
01.02.2021
Verlag
Springer Japan
Erschienen in
Asia-Pacific Financial Markets / Ausgabe 3/2021
Print ISSN: 1387-2834
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-6946
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10690-021-09329-5

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