“…Herding has also been found to vary with stock-size (it often appears stronger among small capitalization stocks, due to their elevated information risk rendering monitoring others' trades informative; see Lakonishok et al, 1992;Wermers, 1999;Sias, 2004;Hung et al, 2010;Benkraiem et al, 2021), as well as across industries (Choi and Sias, 2009;Zhou and Lai, 2009;Gavriilidis et al, 2013;Gebka and Wohar, 2013;Celiker et al, 2015). Furthermore, herding has been found to manifest itself asymmetrically contingent upon different states of a market's returns (Chang et al 2000;Goodfellow et al, 2009;Chiang and Zheng, 2010;Economou et al, 2011;Holmes et al, 2013;Elshqirat, 2020), volatility (Economou et al, 2011;Holmes et al, 2013;Guney et al 2017), volume (Tan et al, 2008;Economou et al, 2011;2015a;2015b;Andrikopoulos et al, 2021) and sentiment (Liao et al, 2011;Blasco et al, 2012), without however, these asymmetries exhibiting any consistent pattern internationally.…”