拆分调整后股价与后续股票收益之间关系的成因及后果

Causes and Consequences of the Relation Between Split‐Adjusted Share Prices and Subsequent Stock Returns

Journal of Business Finance & Accounting · 2006
被引 5
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

发现并解释了拆分调整后股价与后续收益之间存在持续且显著的负相关关系,检验了生存偏差、低价股不对称收益、极端收益和股票拆分调整对投资组合分类的影响,指出该现象对资本市场研究设计有重要影响。

Abstract

Abstract: In this manuscript, we document and explain an empirical artifact — a persistent and substantial negative relation between split‐adjusted share prices and subsequent stock returns — that has potentially important ramifications for capital markets research design. This relation pervades all commonly‐used commercial databases and is insensitive to the choice of database used for either prices or returns. We investigate four potential causes of the empirical regularity: survivorship bias, asymmetric returns to low‐priced stocks, extreme returns, and the effects of stock‐split adjustments on portfolio classifications. We find that survivorship bias accounts for approximately half of the returns documented to a share‐price‐based hedge strategy and that re‐classifications caused by stock split adjustments account for substantially all of the remaining returns. We do not find that controlling for either low‐priced stocks or extreme returns is effective in purging the data of the empirical price artifact. These findings and our explanations thereof are important, as they show that there are potentially troublesome consequences of using share price as a deflator in markets‐based research. In particular, we note and illustrate cause for concern when interpreting associations between share‐price‐scaled variables and subsequent returns as evidence of market inefficiency.

股票拆分调整股价股票收益生存偏差