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Solving the halloween indictor puzzle : market efficiency still reigns

conference contribution
posted on 2004-01-01, 00:00 authored by E Maberly, R Pierce
Prior research by Bouman and Jacobsen (2002) document unusually high monthly returns over the period November-April for both United States (U.S.) and foreign stock markets and label this phenomenon the Halloween effect. The implication is that the Halloween effect represents an exploitable anomaly, which has negative implications for stock market efficiency. We extend this research to the S&P 500 futures contract and find no evidence of an exploitable Halloween effect over the period April 1982 through April 2003. Re-examining Bouman and Jacobsen’s empirical results for the U.S., we find that two outliers drive their results. These two outliers are associated with the “Crash” in October 1987 and collapse of the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management in August 1998. After inserting a dummy variable to account for the impact of the two identified outliers, the Halloween effect disappears.<br>

History

Location

Hamilton, New Zealand

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1.1 Full written paper - refereed

Pagination

1 - 18

Start date

2004-01-30

End date

2004-01-31

ISSN

1175-8074

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of the 8th New Zealand Finance Colloquium 2004

Event

New Zealand Finance Colloquium (8th : 2004 : Hamilton, New Zealand)

Publisher

University of Waikato

Place of publication

Hamilton, N. Z.

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