What is the real relationship between cash holdings and stock returns?
Version 2 2024-06-04, 14:04Version 2 2024-06-04, 14:04
Version 1 2019-09-13, 16:44Version 1 2019-09-13, 16:44
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 14:04 authored by T Chuan ‘Chewie’ Ang, FYEC Lam, T Ma, S Wang, KCJ Wei© 2019 Elsevier Inc. The literature has provided mixed evidence on the relationship between cash holdings and average stock returns. We empirically verify that the relationship is positive and robust to the adjustment of risk, the construction of cash holdings portfolios, and the weighting scheme of portfolio returns. We further examine a battery of potential channels that can explain the positive relationship. We find that the cash holding effect can be subsumed by accruals-related anomalies and it mainly comes from stocks with low net operating assets. It is stronger among stocks with high limits to arbitrage. Overall, our results indicate that the cash holding effect does not present a new asset-pricing regularity, but that it is a manifestation of existing anomalies closely related to mispricing.
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Journal
International Review of Economics and FinanceVolume
64Pagination
513-528Location
Amsterdam, The NetherlandsPublisher DOI
ISSN
1059-0560eISSN
1873-8036Language
EnglishPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal articlePublisher
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Keywords
Social SciencesBusiness, FinanceEconomicsBusiness & EconomicsCash holdingsNOAsAccrualsLimits to arbitrageMispricingInvestor sentimentCROSS-SECTIONINVESTMENT FRICTIONSIDIOSYNCRATIC RISKCOSTLY ARBITRAGEDELISTING BIASEQUILIBRIUMVOLATILITYANOMALIESLIMITSDepartment of Finance3502 Banking, finance and investment3801 Applied economics3501 Accounting, auditing and accountability
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