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Prospect Theory, Mental Accounting, and Momentum
Mark Grinblatt University of California, Los Angeles - Finance Area; Yale University - International Center for Finance; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Bing Han University of Texas at Austin - McCombs School of Business August 2004 Yale ICF Working Paper No. 00-71; UCLA Anderson School Finance Working Paper No. 01-18; AFA 2003 Washington, DC Meetings Abstract: The tendency of some investors to hold on to their losing stocks, driven by prospect theory and mental accounting, creates a spread between a stock's fundamental value and its equilibrium price, as well as price underreaction to information. Spread convergence, arising from the random evolution of fundamental values and updating of reference prices, generates predictable equilibrium prices that will be interpreted as possessing momentum. Cross-sectional empirical tests are consistent with the model. A variable proxying for aggregate unrealized capital gains appears to be the key variable that generates the profitability of a momentum strategy. Past returns have no predictability for the cross-section of returns once this variable is controlled for.
Keywords: prospect theory, mental accounting, disposition effect, momentum JEL Classifications: G12, G14 Working Paper SeriesDate posted: November 09, 2001 ; Last revised: May 11, 2007Suggested CitationContact Information
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