Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5089151 Journal of Banking & Finance 2013 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
For S&P 100 stocks, we find that the weekly returns over option-expiration (OE) weeks (a month's third-Friday week) tend to be high, relative to: (1) the third-Friday weekly returns of other stocks with less option activity, (2) the own stock's other weekly returns, (3) the risk, based on asset-pricing alphas. For these same stocks, a month's fourth-Friday weekly returns underperform modestly. We suggest the following two avenues are likely partial contributors towards understanding these return patterns: (1) delta-hedge rebalancing by option market makers, with a reduction in short-stock hedge positions over the OE week, and (2) declining risk perceptions over the OE week, as measured by option-derived implied volatilities. Our findings suggest option activity can induce reliable patterns in the weekly returns of option-active large-cap stocks.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
Authors
, ,