Islamic calendar anomalies: Pakistani Practitioners' perspective
Islamic calendar anomalies: Pakistani Practitioners' perspective
Purpose
Studies on Islamic calendar anomalies in financial markets tend to apply quantitative analysis to historic share prices. Surprisingly, there is a lack of research investigating whether the participants of such markets are aware of these anomalies and whether these anomalies affect their investment practice. Or is it a case that these practitioners are completely unaware of the anomalies present in these markets and are missing out on profitable opportunities? The purpose of this paper is to analyse the views of influential participants within the Pakistani Stock Market.
Design/methodology/approach
The study documents the findings for 19 face-to-face semi-structured interviews conducted with brokers, regulators and high-net-worth individual investors in Karachi.
Findings
The paper’s major findings indicate that the participants believed that anomalies were present in the stock market and market participants were actively attempting to exploit these anomalies for abnormal gains. Interviewees suggested that predictable patterns can be identified in certain Islamic months (Muharram, Safar, Ramadan and Zil Hajj). The most common pattern highlighted by the interviews related to the month of Ramadan. Furthermore, interviewees mentioned the influence of the “Memon” community in the Pakistani Stock Market. Respondents also suggested that investor sentiment played an important role in influencing the stock market prices and trading patterns.
Originality/value
Because all the prior studies investigating Islamic calendar anomalies in Muslim-majority countries adopted quantitative method using secondary data, the current investigation is of particular value, as it focuses on the qualitative analyses and reports the views of market participants. This allows to fully explore the topic under investigation and to draw robust conclusions.
71-84
Halari, Anwar
6372e114-e55e-4986-8035-a92a55e664c7
Helliar, Christine
0e079edb-b5e4-41fa-a9ba-c30796839d91
Power, David M.
d028e45c-8227-45db-a2d2-27dae896cc82
Tantisantiwong, Nongnuch
73b57288-a4dc-4456-8d1b-12b8d07dc3b4
2018
Halari, Anwar
6372e114-e55e-4986-8035-a92a55e664c7
Helliar, Christine
0e079edb-b5e4-41fa-a9ba-c30796839d91
Power, David M.
d028e45c-8227-45db-a2d2-27dae896cc82
Tantisantiwong, Nongnuch
73b57288-a4dc-4456-8d1b-12b8d07dc3b4
Halari, Anwar, Helliar, Christine, Power, David M. and Tantisantiwong, Nongnuch
(2018)
Islamic calendar anomalies: Pakistani Practitioners' perspective.
Qualitative Research in Financial Markets, 10 (1), .
Abstract
Purpose
Studies on Islamic calendar anomalies in financial markets tend to apply quantitative analysis to historic share prices. Surprisingly, there is a lack of research investigating whether the participants of such markets are aware of these anomalies and whether these anomalies affect their investment practice. Or is it a case that these practitioners are completely unaware of the anomalies present in these markets and are missing out on profitable opportunities? The purpose of this paper is to analyse the views of influential participants within the Pakistani Stock Market.
Design/methodology/approach
The study documents the findings for 19 face-to-face semi-structured interviews conducted with brokers, regulators and high-net-worth individual investors in Karachi.
Findings
The paper’s major findings indicate that the participants believed that anomalies were present in the stock market and market participants were actively attempting to exploit these anomalies for abnormal gains. Interviewees suggested that predictable patterns can be identified in certain Islamic months (Muharram, Safar, Ramadan and Zil Hajj). The most common pattern highlighted by the interviews related to the month of Ramadan. Furthermore, interviewees mentioned the influence of the “Memon” community in the Pakistani Stock Market. Respondents also suggested that investor sentiment played an important role in influencing the stock market prices and trading patterns.
Originality/value
Because all the prior studies investigating Islamic calendar anomalies in Muslim-majority countries adopted quantitative method using secondary data, the current investigation is of particular value, as it focuses on the qualitative analyses and reports the views of market participants. This allows to fully explore the topic under investigation and to draw robust conclusions.
Text
Manuscript-Sep-2017-Revised-final-version-Accepted
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 13 September 2017
Published date: 2018
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 414381
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/414381
PURE UUID: e9e226e0-18c9-4d05-8de1-baf6b2d6cefa
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 28 Sep 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:46
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Contributors
Author:
Anwar Halari
Author:
Christine Helliar
Author:
David M. Power
Author:
Nongnuch Tantisantiwong
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