Daily short covering activity and the weekend effect: Evidence from Taiwan
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-1-2016
Abstract
By using a unique dataset of daily short covering volumes obtained from the Taiwan Stock Exchange, we first examine, in general, what drives daily short covering activity in the cross-section and its return predictability; we then investigate, in specific, the relation between short covering and the weekend effect. In general, we find that short covering activity is positively related to short selling activity; and short sellers on average are contemporaneous contrarians. Large-cap stocks, growth stocks, high-price stocks and stocks with high institutional ownership generally have greater short-selling and short-covering activities. We present evidence that regardless of firm characteristics, short-sellers are capable of identifying stocks whose prices tend to decline when they initiate short positions. However, the ability of short sellers to successfully cover their positions is less clear. In specific tests of the weekend effect, we find that when short covering activity is relatively high, Friday returns are more negative. Furthermore, firms with high short selling activity have a larger Monday return compared to firms with low short selling activity. Our findings are contrary to the hypothesis proposed by Chen and Singal (2003), but consistent with the notion that short sellers are contrarian in contemporaneous stock returns.
Identifier
84955237248 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Pacific Basin Finance Journal
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pacfin.2015.12.008
ISSN
0927538X
First Page
166
Last Page
184
Volume
36
Grant
71573177
Fund Ref
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Recommended Citation
Yan, Zhipeng; Cheng, Lee Young; Zhao, Yan; and Huang, Chung Yuan, "Daily short covering activity and the weekend effect: Evidence from Taiwan" (2016). Faculty Publications. 10693.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/10693
