Extrapolative beliefs in the cross-section: What can we learn from the crowds?

Authors Da, Huang, Jin
Journal Journal of Financial Economics
Year 2021
Type Published Paper
Abstract Using novel data from a crowdsourcing platform for ranking stocks, we investigate how investors form expectations about stock returns over the next week. We find that investors extrapolate from stocks' recent past returns, with more weight on more recent returns, especially when recent returns are negative, salient, or from a dispersed cross-section. Such extrapolative beliefs are stronger among nonprofessionals and large stocks. Moreover, consensus rankings negatively predict returns over the next week, more so among stocks with low institutional ownership and a high degree of extrapolation. A trading strategy that sorts stocks on investor beliefs generates an economically significant profit.
Keywords Return extrapolation, beliefs in the cross-section, expectation formation
URL https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0304405X20302786
Tags Archival Empirical  |   Asset Pricing, Trading Volume and Market Efficiency  |   Media and Textual Analysis