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Penny Wise, Dollar Foolish: Buy-Sell Imbalances On and Around Round NumbersUtpal BhattacharyaIndiana University Bloomington - Department of Finance Craig W. HoldenIndiana University Bloomington - Department of Finance Stacey E. JacobsenSouthern Methodist University (SMU) - Edwin L. Cox School of Business - Department of Finance March 30, 2011 AFA 2011 Denver Meetings Paper Management Science, (special issue on Behavioral Economics and Finance), Forthcoming Abstract: This paper provides evidence that stock traders focus on round numbers as cognitive reference points for value. Using a random sample of more than 100 million stock transactions, we find excess buying (selling) by liquidity demanders at all price points one penny below (above) round numbers. Further, the size of the buy-sell imbalance is monotonic in the roundness of the adjacent round number (i.e., largest adjacent to integers, second-largest adjacent to half-dollars, etc.). Conditioning on the price path, we find much stronger excess buying (selling) by liquidity demanders when the ask falls (bid rises) to reach the integer than when it crosses the integer. We discuss and test three explanations for these results. Finally, 24-hour returns also vary by price point and buy-sell imbalances are a major determinant of that variation across price points. Buying (selling) by liquidity demanders below (above) round numbers yield losses approaching $1 billion per year.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 45 Keywords: Left-digit effect, nine-ending prices, round numbers, trading strategies, clustering JEL Classification: C15, G12, G20 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: March 15, 2010 ; Last revised: April 9, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
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