Do Investors Overreact to COVID-19 Outbreak? An Experimental Study Using Sequential Disclosures
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Date
2023-03-31
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Finance and Management in Warsaw, Faculty of Management and Finance, Warsaw
Abstract
This paper aims to investigate market participants' reactions to sequential information, presenting firm-specific news and market-wide information. Experimental study takes place in the COVID-19 pandemic era, as market-wide information representation. We also provide firm-specific information in the form of company fundamental information. The results show that participants, as representatives of retail investors, do not overreact to COVID-19. The recency effect dominates their decision-making. Neither firm-specific information nor market-wide information can eliminate the recency effect in decision making. Investors still provide valuations based on the latest information they receive. Another interesting finding in this study is that positive framing of information cannot mitigate the effects of bad news contained therein. Our findings contribute to the study of behavioral finance and corporate disclosure strategies. From the market participants' point of view, our results describe that investors' decisions are often not based on the information content but the latest information they received. From the company perspective, this research also contributes to the corporate disclosure strategy valued by investors based on how they disclose information to the public.
Description
This is an Open Access article under the CC-BY 4.0 license, available at: https://www.econstor.eu/handle/10419/297620
The article is published in Contemporary Economics, Volume 17, Issue 1.
The author Grigorescu Adriana is affiliated to SNSPA, Faculty of Public Administration.
Keywords
COVID-19, Sequential information, Market-wide information
Citation
Sulistiawan, D. et al. (2023). Do investors overreact to COVID-19 outbreak? An experimental study using sequential disclosures. Contemporary Economics, 17(1), 43–57. https://doi.org/10.5709/ce.1897-9254.498