Individualism and momentum around the world

Authors Chui, Titman, Wei
Journal Journal of Finance
Year 2010
Type Published Paper
Abstract This paper examines how cultural differences influence the returns of momentum strategies. Cross-country cultural differences are measured with an individualism index developed by Hofstede (2001), which is related to overconfidence and self-attribution bias. We find that individualism is positively associated with trading volume and volatility, as well as to the magnitude of momentum profits. Momentum profits are also positively related to analyst forecast dispersion, transaction costs, and the familiarity of the market to foreigners, and negatively related to firm size and volatility. However, the addition of these and other variables does not dampen the relation between individualism and momentum profits.
Keywords Cultural differences, momentum strategy, asset pricing, behavioral finance
URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1540-6261.2009.01532.x
Tags Archival Empirical  |   Asset Pricing, Trading Volume and Market Efficiency  |   Financing- and Investment Decisions (Individual)  |   Investment Decisions (Institutional)