2005
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.761666
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Can Short-sellers Predict Returns? Daily Evidence

Abstract: We test whether short-sellers in Nasdaq-listed stocks are able to predict future returns based on new SEC-mandated data for the first six months of 2005. There is a tremendous amount of short-term trading strategies involving short-sales during the sample: Short-sales represent 27 percent of Nasdaq share volume while monthly short-interest is about 3.1 percent of shares outstanding (5.5 days to cover). Short-sellers are on average contrarian -they sell short following positive returns. Increasing short-sales p… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(91 citation statements)
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“…Boehmer and Wu (2007) find that short sellers target stocks that become out of line with their fundamental value and add to the informational efficiency in security prices by shorting stocks that are mispriced. Consistent with this argument, Diether et al (2009a) show that short sellers are contrarian in contemporaneous and past returns suggesting that short sellers target overvalued equities. 1 This paper examines short selling activity of real estate investment trusts (REITs), an industry which has been ignored in the short selling literature.…”
supporting
confidence: 53%
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“…Boehmer and Wu (2007) find that short sellers target stocks that become out of line with their fundamental value and add to the informational efficiency in security prices by shorting stocks that are mispriced. Consistent with this argument, Diether et al (2009a) show that short sellers are contrarian in contemporaneous and past returns suggesting that short sellers target overvalued equities. 1 This paper examines short selling activity of real estate investment trusts (REITs), an industry which has been ignored in the short selling literature.…”
supporting
confidence: 53%
“…Boehmer et al (2008) and Arnold et al (2005) find short activity is a function of the size of firm and security's trading activity, so a security's market capitalization should affect short selling activity. Diether et al (2009a) document that price volatility positively affects the level of short selling. If short sellers are informed, as the literature suggests, then the level of short selling will be a function of information flow.…”
Section: Data Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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