Investor Sentiment, Portfolio Returns, and Macroeconomic Variables

Investor sentiment is an important aspect of behavioural finance, which provides explanation of anomalies to the asset’s intrinsic values. Sentiments can easily affect individual investors. Historically, Australia is regarded as rich in resources but poor in capital, and this motivates the paper to...

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Published in:Journal of Risk and Financial Management
Main Author: Banchit A.; Abidin S.; Lim S.; Morni F.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI) 2020
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85125316810&doi=10.3390%2fjrfm13110259&partnerID=40&md5=48814d0c5270aacc998c1ac3b1c38f2e
id 2-s2.0-85125316810
spelling 2-s2.0-85125316810
Banchit A.; Abidin S.; Lim S.; Morni F.
Investor Sentiment, Portfolio Returns, and Macroeconomic Variables
2020
Journal of Risk and Financial Management
13
11
10.3390/jrfm13110259
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85125316810&doi=10.3390%2fjrfm13110259&partnerID=40&md5=48814d0c5270aacc998c1ac3b1c38f2e
Investor sentiment is an important aspect of behavioural finance, which provides explanation of anomalies to the asset’s intrinsic values. Sentiments can easily affect individual investors. Historically, Australia is regarded as rich in resources but poor in capital, and this motivates the paper to further study and compare the effects of investor sentiment on performance returns. Aggregate and cross-sectional effects, as well as predictive regression analysis to forecast the relationships, while controlling for the macroeconomic variables, are used by employing Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) and trade volume as sentiment proxies. Contrary to some studies with aggregate stock markets, it is discovered that in the short term, investor sentiment poses a positive impact with strong predictive power on the forecast of portfolio returns but not so much in the long run, which supports the classical theories of rational investors. In both Australian and New Zealand markets, the sentiment proxies also cannot predict the returns portfolios with dividends in the long/short portfolio and book-to-market ratio long/short portfolio. © 2020 by the authors.
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
19118074
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Banchit A.; Abidin S.; Lim S.; Morni F.
spellingShingle Banchit A.; Abidin S.; Lim S.; Morni F.
Investor Sentiment, Portfolio Returns, and Macroeconomic Variables
author_facet Banchit A.; Abidin S.; Lim S.; Morni F.
author_sort Banchit A.; Abidin S.; Lim S.; Morni F.
title Investor Sentiment, Portfolio Returns, and Macroeconomic Variables
title_short Investor Sentiment, Portfolio Returns, and Macroeconomic Variables
title_full Investor Sentiment, Portfolio Returns, and Macroeconomic Variables
title_fullStr Investor Sentiment, Portfolio Returns, and Macroeconomic Variables
title_full_unstemmed Investor Sentiment, Portfolio Returns, and Macroeconomic Variables
title_sort Investor Sentiment, Portfolio Returns, and Macroeconomic Variables
publishDate 2020
container_title Journal of Risk and Financial Management
container_volume 13
container_issue 11
doi_str_mv 10.3390/jrfm13110259
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85125316810&doi=10.3390%2fjrfm13110259&partnerID=40&md5=48814d0c5270aacc998c1ac3b1c38f2e
description Investor sentiment is an important aspect of behavioural finance, which provides explanation of anomalies to the asset’s intrinsic values. Sentiments can easily affect individual investors. Historically, Australia is regarded as rich in resources but poor in capital, and this motivates the paper to further study and compare the effects of investor sentiment on performance returns. Aggregate and cross-sectional effects, as well as predictive regression analysis to forecast the relationships, while controlling for the macroeconomic variables, are used by employing Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) and trade volume as sentiment proxies. Contrary to some studies with aggregate stock markets, it is discovered that in the short term, investor sentiment poses a positive impact with strong predictive power on the forecast of portfolio returns but not so much in the long run, which supports the classical theories of rational investors. In both Australian and New Zealand markets, the sentiment proxies also cannot predict the returns portfolios with dividends in the long/short portfolio and book-to-market ratio long/short portfolio. © 2020 by the authors.
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
issn 19118074
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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