“…This backdrop steered ultimately to flourishing of a novel era of finance, namely behavioural finance that has eased explaining the impacts of stakeholders' failure to share logical expectations on markets (Kim & Lee, 2022). Following the emergence of behavioural finance, researchers commenced focusing on investigating the nexus of investor sentiment with stock yields (Baker & Wurgler, 2006, 2007; Berger & Turtle, 2012; Greenwood & Shleifer, 2014; Kim & Lee, 2022), often explaining the stock market anomalies such as impact of investors' irrational optimism (Byun et al, 2022), the value premium, the momentum impact, analyst prediction flaws and so on by investor sentiment (Sun et al, 2021; Wu et al, 2021). However, early empirical evidence consistently linked investor sentiment with speculative bubbles (Smidt, 1968), subjective anticipations (Zweig, 1973), and noise (Black, 1986; De Long et al, 1990).…”