Seasonalities in China's Stock Markets : Cultural or Structural?

In this paper, we examine returns in the Chinese A and B stock markets for evidence of calendar anomalies. We find that both cultural and structural (segmentation) factors play an important role in influencing the pricing of both A- and B-shares in China. There is some evidence of a February turn-of-the-year effect, partly owing to the timing of the Chinese Lunar New Year (CNY); and the holiday effect around the CNY period is stronger and more persistent compared with the other public holidays. The segmentation between the two markets is apparent in the day-of-the-week effect, where B stock markets tend to post significant negative returns on Tuesdays, corresponding with overnight developments in the United States, while significant negative returns are observed on Mondays in the A stock markets. Investment strategies based on some of these calendar anomalies, and allowing for transaction costs, suggest that the A stock markets tend to offer more economically significant returns.
Publication date: January 2006
ISBN: 9781451862645
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Finance , A-shares , B-shares , Chinese Lunar New Year , day-of-the-week effect , half-month effect , half-year effect , holiday effect , seasonalities , turn-of-the-year effect , stock market , statistics , standard deviation , stock returns

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