Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5089197 Journal of Banking & Finance 2014 20 Pages PDF
Abstract

•SURGE, SUE, and prior returns each carry some distinct unpriced information content.•None dominates one another among revenue, earnings, and price momentum.•Investors underestimate the joint implications of SURGE, SUE, and prior returns.•Cross-contingencies of momentum profits are observed.•A three-way combined momentum strategy may offer monthly return as high as 1.44%.

This paper examines the profits of revenue, earnings, and price momentum strategies in an attempt to understand investor reactions when facing multiple information of firm performance in various scenarios. We first offer evidence that there is no dominating momentum strategy among the revenue, earnings, and price momentums, suggesting that revenue surprises, earnings surprises, and prior returns each carry some exclusive unpriced information content. We next show that the profits of momentum driven by firm fundamental performance information (revenue or earnings) depend upon the accompanying firm market performance information (price), and vice versa. The robust monotonicity in multivariate momentum returns is consistent with the argument that the market does not only underestimate the individual information but also the joint implications of multiple information on firm performance, particularly when they point in the same direction. A three-way combined momentum strategy may offer monthly return as high as 1.44%. The information conveyed by revenue surprises and earnings surprises combined account for about 19% of price momentum effects, which finding adds to the large literature on tracing the sources of price momentum.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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