This paper focuses on stocks that experience major price changes. Using analyst reports as a proxy. I find that price events accompanied by information are followed by drift, while no-information ones result in reversals. One interpretation of these results is that investors underreact to news about fundamentals and overreact to other shocks that move stock prices. Consistent with this hypothesis, information-based price changes are more strongly correlated with future earnings surprises than no-information ones. Furthermore, drift exists only when the direction of the price move and of the change in analyst recommendations have the same sign. Finally, the ratio of no-information to information-based price shocks is strongly correlated with aggregate implied volatility and also forecasts momentum returns. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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CUNY, Brooklyn Coll, Finance, Brooklyn, NY USACUNY, Brooklyn Coll, Finance, Brooklyn, NY USA
Baek, Seungho
Glambosky, Mina
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CUNY, Brooklyn Coll, Finance, Brooklyn, NY USA
CUNY, Brooklyn Coll, Finance, 2900 Bedford Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11210 USACUNY, Brooklyn Coll, Finance, Brooklyn, NY USA
Glambosky, Mina
Mohanty, Sunil
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CUNY, Brooklyn Coll, Finance, Brooklyn, NY USACUNY, Brooklyn Coll, Finance, Brooklyn, NY USA