Business Cycle Variation in Short Selling Strategies: Picking During Expansions and Timing During Recessions
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, forthcoming
52 Pages Posted: 31 Aug 2017 Last revised: 12 Jul 2021
Date Written: May 14, 2021
Abstract
We present evidence that short sellers alternate between stock picking during expansions and market timing during recessions. First, firm-level short interest is a much stronger negative predictor of the cross-section of stock returns during expansions than it is during recessions. High short interest also only predicts negative future earnings announcement returns during expansions. We attribute these findings to short sellers’ emphasis on collecting firm-specific signals. Second, short sellers appear to make factor bets more so during recessions than in expansions. These bets tend to pay off as we observe a strong negative relation between the betas of highly shorted stocks and future stock market returns, a result which disappears during expansions. Together, these findings are consistent with theories of information acquisition under attention constraints, endogenous information production, as well as theories of time variation in aggregate overconfidence amongst traders.
Keywords: Short Selling, Rational Inattention, Inattention, Business Cycles, Asset Pricing, Return Predictability
JEL Classification: G10, G12, G14
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation