Browsing by Author "Pinho, Carlos"
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- COVID-19 Surprise Effect and Government Response Measures on the Influence on Asset Pricing Risk among European Travel and Airline SectorsPublication . Reis, Pedro; Pinho, CarlosPurpose: This work provides an empirical analysis of investor behaviour's simultaneous influence due to the surprise effect caused by COVID-19 cases and government responses to market risk. This analysis compares tourism assets risk with other sectors and different types of investors' assets and categories in Europe. Design: The paper applies an ARIMA with a GARCH model to predict conditional volatility of models for market uncertainty. Nonlinear models, factor analysis and time series linear regression for stationary variables in first differences are applied to predict market uncertainty. Findings: We demonstrate that market risk does not arise from COVID-19 cases but instead from the surprise effect, as the market accurately predicts future cases. Only the volatility of the sectors Travel, Airline, and Utility are influenced by both surprise effect and government response, but only the travel sector reveals an interaction effect with both government response effort and surprise effect. Originality: The article mutually studies the simultaneous interactions among investor behaviour due to the surprised effect caused by COVID-19 and government responses to the pandemic and the influence on professional investors' volatility in two asset types and between different sectors. Practical implications: With this model and results, investors and financial service providers may verify whether or not government intervention during pandemic periods is effective in reducing uncertainty and risk levels on sectors, types of investors and different sorts of assets.
- A dynamic factor model applied to investor sentiment in the European contextPublication . Reis, Pedro; Pinho, CarlosThis paper proposes an Investor Sentiment Index for the European market and tests its predictability power over returns and volatility. The constructed Investor Sentiment Index for Europe draws upon three well-established and two recent individual sentiment proxies through a novel dynamic factor modeling addressed to behavioral finance. The index is obtained through an extended period of analysis and validated with other sentiment index measures. The work relies on individual sentiment proxies based on a dynamic factor model and tests it using a TGARCH model for volatility and returns. It carries out an in-sample and out-of-sample analysis to examine this sentiment index’s forecasting power over returns sustained on a recursive rolling window prediction against Fama and French’s three-factor model. The findings demonstrate that the proposed index closely predicts STOXX600 variance and returns and confirms a strong spillover effect between European and US stock markets. This study also concludes that the proposed European Sentiment Index is a valid alternative method for investors to monitor and predict market behaviors. The developed sentiment measure is a vital market prediction movement tool for financial information providers, investors, bankers, and financial analysts. The research combines the sentiment index with a TGARCH approach over the extended period of analysis and validates the method with other sentiment index measures. An in-sample and out-of-sample study confirms the predictive power of this work’s sentiment over returns compared to Fama and French’s three-factor model.
- A new European investor sentiment index (EURsent) and its return and volatility predictabilityPublication . Reis, Pedro Manuel Nogueira; Pinho, CarlosThis study presents a new European investor sentiment index, EURsent, based on new individual sentiment proxies such as VSTOXX, gold, and the German bond yield spread, and studies the spillover and contagion between the United States and Europe. Furthermore, it analyses the simultaneous influence of this new sentiment measure index on both volatility and stock returns, including causality. Applying well-established statistical techniques, such as principal component analysis, ordinary least squares, autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (ARCH), generalized ARCH (GARCH), and threshold GARCH models, the findings demonstrate how EURsent is closely interrelated with the most universally recognized sentiment index in academia, demonstrating strong co-movement between the US and European stock markets, mainly prior to the global subprime crisis. The study also applies vector autoregressive modelling and OOS analysis that allows one to conclude that EURsent is a strong predictor of market returns, through the discount rate and cash flow news, although the latter is the most relevant channel. This study creates a truly representative measure of global European investor sentiment that is comparable to that created by Baker and Wurgler for the United States, interlinking a holistic sentiment measure index, sustained on new single investor sentiment proxies, with conditionally market volatility and market returns, suggesting causality. EURsent could thus be a tool for investment managers, investors, and financial service providers as well as regulators to monitor the evolution of stock markets.
- A Reappraisal of the Causal Relationship between Sentiment Proxies and Stock ReturnsPublication . Reis, Pedro; Pinho, CarlosThis article investigates the suitability of 13 investor sentiment proxies as causal explanations for monthly stock returns of the European S&P 350 constituents over 45 years. We analyzed a sample of 362 companies covering 16 European countries. Analyses incorporate multiple categories of investor sentiment arising from market or survey data, as well as technical analysis, risk measures, company fundamentals and macroeconomic variables. In addition, we provide an extended review of sentiment proxy measures based on market data. This work applied general model of moments (GMM) to dynamic panel data to estimate short-run and long-run influences along with Granger causality. Our findings demonstrate the role of several investor sentiment measures in predicting stock returns even after controlling for variables such as fundamentals, macroeconomic, market and technical analysis. Together, sentiment measures of implied volatility in stock options, such as VIX and VSTOXX, put and call ratios, gold, government bond yield spreads, mispricing along with economic and confidence sentiment indicators can significantly predict how irrational behaviors of investors can determine stock returns. Co-movements between markets provide further evidence of contagion. Considering the unobservable nature of sentiment, we provide a set of sentiment proxies, and reveal new measures such as gold, government yields spread and a mispricing ratio, that serve to predict European market returns. Furthermore, to our knowledge this study is one of the few studies to apply time dynamic panel data estimation to a large set of sentiment proxies and a set of complete control variables in a long-term framework.