Stock-level Sentiment and the Security Market Line

Date
2020
Authors
Taylor, Josh
Supervisor
Nguyen Hoang, Nhut
Item type
Dissertation
Degree name
Master of Business
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Volume Title
Publisher
Auckland University of Technology
Abstract

High market beta stocks experience overpricing in periods of high market sentiment, while traditional beta pricing prevails in periods of low market sentiment (Antoniou et al., 2016). I conjecture that the negative (positive) relationship between market beta and expected return in high (low) market sentiment periods is driven by the stocks that are more sensitive to market sentiment than the stocks that are less sensitive to market sentiment. Using non-financial common stocks listed on the NYSE and NASDAQ between 1980 to 2017, I weakly confirm this conjecture in my univariate results. However, the differential effects of the most and least sentiment sensitive stocks on the market beta-return relationship are not significant in a regression framework.

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Keywords
Investor Sentiment , Market Beta , Capital Asset Pricing Model , Security Market Line
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