2020
DOI: 10.1108/jcms-07-2020-0025
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Predictability in securities price formation: differences between developed and emerging markets

Abstract: PurposeThis paper examines whether there are differences in the nature of the price discovery process across established versus emerging stock markets using a twenty-country sample.Design/methodology/approachThe authors analyse security returns for traces of predictability or non-randomness using variance ratio tests, Granger-Causality models and runs tests.FindingsThe findings pinpoint at predictabilities which seem inconsistent with market efficiency, and they suggest that the inherent cause of predictabilit… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Their undervaluation is a result of scale effects, momentum, and illiquidity. In the Asian markets context, Shin and Soydemir (2010) found greater persistence in TEs, with currency rates playing a substantial role in the failure to track along with commonly cited market liquidity factor (Osterhoff and Kaserer, 2016; Camilleri et al. , 2020).…”
Section: Empirical Findingsmentioning
confidence: 93%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Their undervaluation is a result of scale effects, momentum, and illiquidity. In the Asian markets context, Shin and Soydemir (2010) found greater persistence in TEs, with currency rates playing a substantial role in the failure to track along with commonly cited market liquidity factor (Osterhoff and Kaserer, 2016; Camilleri et al. , 2020).…”
Section: Empirical Findingsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Their undervaluation is a result of scale effects, momentum, and illiquidity. In the Asian markets context, Shin and Soydemir (2010) found greater persistence in TEs, with currency rates playing a substantial role in the failure to track along with commonly cited market liquidity factor (Osterhoff and Kaserer, 2016;Camilleri et al, 2020). On the other hand, Charteris et al (2014) provide compelling evidence that ETF premiums and discounts encourage feedback trading in EMEs, which becomes more prevalent as premiums rise.…”
Section: Cluster 1: Active Funds Vs Passive Fundsmentioning
confidence: 96%