Impact of ownership concentration, industry and liquidity factors on momentum effect in Malaysia and Australia

It is well documented that momentum strategies are profitable and significant in developed markets. By contrast, emerging market momentum evidence is found to be inconclusive. This suggests a continued need for further exploration in the research area, and underscores the possibility that some un...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tan, Yeng May
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/68178/1/GSM%202015%2015%20IR.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/68178/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:It is well documented that momentum strategies are profitable and significant in developed markets. By contrast, emerging market momentum evidence is found to be inconclusive. This suggests a continued need for further exploration in the research area, and underscores the possibility that some underlying attributes fundamental to the Asian and emerging markets could be responsible for this disparity. The current study examines a few aspects of momentum investment strategy using data from two qualitatively distinct markets of the Asia-Pacific region – Malaysia and Australia. The employment of these two databases helps shed different light on the performances of momentum investment strategies in these markets and how factors ubiquitous to the emerging markets are possibly linked to the momentum effect. The study employs more than 700 stocks for each market and conducts analyses across the study period spanning from 1995 to 2013. Overall, this study finds evidence of momentum returns in both markets, although evidence in Malaysia is less pronounced and of shorter term nature. In Australia, momentum portfolios are significantly profitable in the short and intermediate terms. In addition to covering a full sample period, targeted examination is also conducted over the 1997 Asian crisis and 2006 global crisis sub-periods to evaluate the impact of severe crisis on momentum profitability. The results are consistent with the prediction of weaker or negative momentum during periods of severe economic downturn. In addition to stock-level momentum, this study also finds strong evidence of industry momentum for both the Malaysian and Australian equity market. Further analysis of industry-neutral momentum portfolios offers indication that industry component can be a determining factor of stock momentum. Motivated by the lack of evidence of an association between ownership concentration and momentum effect, the study examines the potential linkage between ownership concentration and momentum. The results show that ownership concentration is an attributing factor of stock momentum in Malaysia, but finds no such compelling evidence in Australia. The Malaysian evidence is consistent with the notion that information uncertainty associated with concentrated ownership leads to more synchronous price movements. This is in line with the unique institutional and corporate structure of Malaysia. By implementing momentum strategies on liquidityconscious sub-samples, the study further shows that bid-ask spread can predict the strength and persistence of return continuation for both markets. The finding of this analysis thus validates the conjecture that liquidity plays a determining role in momentum, and it shed light on the relation between liquidity and momentum returns in the emerging market context.