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Information Efficiency and Firm-Specific Return Variation

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  • Patrick J. Kelly

    (Department of Finance, New Economic School, 100A Novaya Street, Skolkovo, 143025 Moscow, Russia)

Abstract

Reasoning that private firm-specific information causes firm-specific return variation that drives down market-modelR2s, [Morcket al., 2000, The Information Content of Stock Markets: Why do Emerging Markets have Synchronous Stock Price Movements?Journal of Financial Economics, 58, 215–260] begin a large body of research which interpretsR2as an inverse measure of price informativeness. Low-R2s or "synchronicity," as it is called in this literature, signal that prices more efficiently incorporate private firm-specific information, and highR2s indicate less. For this to be true, we would expect that low-R2stocks have characteristics that facilitate private informed trade, i.e., lower information costs and fewer impediments to arbitrage. However, in this paper we document the opposite: Low-R2stocks are small, young, and followed by few analysts, and have high bid-ask spreads, high price impact, greater short-sale constraints and are infrequently traded. In fact, microstructure measures suggest that private-information events are less likely for low-R2stocks than high, and that differences inR2are driven as much by firm-specific volatility on days without private news as by firm-specific volatility on days with private news. These results call into question prior research usingR2to measure the information content of stock prices.

Suggested Citation

  • Patrick J. Kelly, 2014. "Information Efficiency and Firm-Specific Return Variation," Quarterly Journal of Finance (QJF), World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., vol. 4(04), pages 1-44.
  • Handle: RePEc:wsi:qjfxxx:v:04:y:2014:i:04:n:s2010139214500189
    DOI: 10.1142/S2010139214500189
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    Keywords

    Synchronicity; R2; private information; idiosyncratic volatility; market efficiency;
    All these keywords.

    JEL classification:

    • R2 - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics - - Household Analysis

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