The information content of stock markets around the world: A cultural explanation

•We examine whether individualism and uncertainty avoidance indexes explain the information content of stock markets.•The information content of stock markets is higher in more individualistic countries.•The information content of stock markets is higher in low uncertainty-avoiding countries.•The fi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of international financial markets, institutions & money institutions & money, 2013-10, Vol.26, p.1-29
Hauptverfasser: Nguyen, Nhut H., Truong, Cameron
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container_title Journal of international financial markets, institutions & money
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creator Nguyen, Nhut H.
Truong, Cameron
description •We examine whether individualism and uncertainty avoidance indexes explain the information content of stock markets.•The information content of stock markets is higher in more individualistic countries.•The information content of stock markets is higher in low uncertainty-avoiding countries.•The findings are robust to several control variables or alternative cultural indexes. We draw on the psychology literature on cross-country cultural differences to explain the information content of stock markets around the world. We show that cultural dimensions in the studies of Hofstede (1980, 2001) such as individualism and uncertainty avoidance closely relate to several behavioral biases widely discussed in accounting and finance research. These cultural dimensions also signal different risk preferences. We argue that behavioral biases and risk preferences influence how international investors act on firm-specific information and empirically test whether individualism and uncertainty avoidance indexes can explain the cross-country information content of stock markets. We compute R2 from the market model to measure the general information content of stock markets in the long term, abnormal return variance, and abnormal trading volume around earnings announcements to measure the short-term information content of earnings announcements. Using more than 150,000 earnings announcements from 42 countries for the period 1990–2006, we find that the information content of stock markets is higher in more individualistic countries and in low uncertainty-avoiding countries. The relations between cultural dimensions and measures of information content are robust to the inclusion of several control variables or the use of updated cultural indexes that account for possible changes in cultures over time.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.intfin.2013.03.001
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We draw on the psychology literature on cross-country cultural differences to explain the information content of stock markets around the world. We show that cultural dimensions in the studies of Hofstede (1980, 2001) such as individualism and uncertainty avoidance closely relate to several behavioral biases widely discussed in accounting and finance research. These cultural dimensions also signal different risk preferences. We argue that behavioral biases and risk preferences influence how international investors act on firm-specific information and empirically test whether individualism and uncertainty avoidance indexes can explain the cross-country information content of stock markets. We compute R2 from the market model to measure the general information content of stock markets in the long term, abnormal return variance, and abnormal trading volume around earnings announcements to measure the short-term information content of earnings announcements. Using more than 150,000 earnings announcements from 42 countries for the period 1990–2006, we find that the information content of stock markets is higher in more individualistic countries and in low uncertainty-avoiding countries. 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subjects Abnormal return variance
Abnormal returns
Abnormal trading volume
Behavioral biases
Cultural differences
Earnings announcements
Individualism
Information content
Information science
International finance
Risk preferences
Securities markets
Stock exchanges
Studies
title The information content of stock markets around the world: A cultural explanation
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