The Lunar Moon Festival and the dark side of the moon
The Lunar Moon Festival and the dark side of the moon
We propose and adduce evidence for a new seasonal anomaly associated with the Lunar Moon Festival (LMF) in East Asian economies. While the LMF effect bears some resemblance to the festivity and vacation anomalies, it is mainly driven by nostalgia, historically negative associations, the full moon and uncertainty about future harvest prospects. This negative sentiment and associated increase in risk and loss aversion are responsible for reducing share turnover, return volatility and stock returns over a 2-week period. The LMF effect is the strongest for China, Taiwan and South Korea where it is not only celebrated as a public or cultural holiday but it also impacts on neighbouring stock markets where overseas Chinese investors possess significant resources. Robustness checks demonstrate that it has a distinctive and more pronounced impact than competing seasonal effects associated with lunar phases and the summer vacations.
1565-1575
Kuo, Jing-Ming
4ded9336-66d1-4a13-bc34-5473e6532eb6
Coakley, Jerry
f8a57a2a-b990-4773-b022-ad9eb9ca9667
Wood, Andrew
85eeabbb-2093-4a01-9235-653eb00e8f55
2010
Kuo, Jing-Ming
4ded9336-66d1-4a13-bc34-5473e6532eb6
Coakley, Jerry
f8a57a2a-b990-4773-b022-ad9eb9ca9667
Wood, Andrew
85eeabbb-2093-4a01-9235-653eb00e8f55
Kuo, Jing-Ming, Coakley, Jerry and Wood, Andrew
(2010)
The Lunar Moon Festival and the dark side of the moon.
Applied Financial Economics, 20 (20), .
(doi:10.1080/09603107.2010.507172).
Abstract
We propose and adduce evidence for a new seasonal anomaly associated with the Lunar Moon Festival (LMF) in East Asian economies. While the LMF effect bears some resemblance to the festivity and vacation anomalies, it is mainly driven by nostalgia, historically negative associations, the full moon and uncertainty about future harvest prospects. This negative sentiment and associated increase in risk and loss aversion are responsible for reducing share turnover, return volatility and stock returns over a 2-week period. The LMF effect is the strongest for China, Taiwan and South Korea where it is not only celebrated as a public or cultural holiday but it also impacts on neighbouring stock markets where overseas Chinese investors possess significant resources. Robustness checks demonstrate that it has a distinctive and more pronounced impact than competing seasonal effects associated with lunar phases and the summer vacations.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 September 2010
Published date: 2010
Organisations:
Centre for Digital, Interactive & Data Driven Marketing
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 357062
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/357062
ISSN: 0960-3107
PURE UUID: 0c449f62-2862-4fde-8271-c49a80b9da70
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 25 Sep 2013 09:37
Last modified: 10 Jun 2024 16:34
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Jing-Ming Kuo
Author:
Jerry Coakley
Author:
Andrew Wood
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics