Canadian investors and the discount on closed-end funds


Autoria(s): Wang, Yue
Contribuinte(s)

Faculty of Business Programs

Data(s)

09/03/2010

09/03/2010

09/03/2010

Resumo

Small investors' sentiment has been proposed by behaviouralists to explain the existence and behavior of discount on closed-end funds (CEFD). The empirical tests of this sentiment hypothesis so far provide equivocal results. Besides, most of out-of-sample tests outside U.S. are not robust in the sense that they fail to well control other firm characteristics and risk factors that may explain stock return and to provide a formal cross-sectional test of the link between CEFD and stock return. This thesis explores the role of CEFD in asset pricing and further validates CEFD as a sentiment proxy in Canadian context and augments the extant studies by examining the redemption feature inherent in Canadian closed-end funds and by enhancing the robustness of the empirical tests. Our empirical results document differential behaviors in discounts between redeemable funds and non-redeemable funds. However, we don't find supportive evidence of CEFD as a priced factor. Specifically, the stocks with different exposures to CEFD fail to provide significantly different average return. Nor does CEFD provide significant incremental explanatory power, after controlling other well-known firm characteristics and risk factors, in cross-sectional as well as time-series variation of stock return. This evidence, together with the findings from our direct test of CEFD as a sentiment index, suggests that CEFD, even the discount on traditional non-redeemable closed-end funds, is unlikely to be driven by elusive sentiment in Canada.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10464/2939

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

St. Catharines, Ont. : Brock University, Dept. of Management, 2010.

Palavras-Chave #Closed-end funds. #Stockholders--Canada. #Stocks--Prices
Tipo

Electronic Thesis or Dissertation