TY - JOUR
T1 - Day-of-the-Week Effect and Investors' Psychological Mood Testing in a Highly Mispriced Capital Market
AU - Luxianto, Rizky
AU - Arief, Usman
AU - Prasetyo, Muhammad Budi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Gadjah Mada University. All right reserved.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Research Aims: This research examines investors' psychological moods which cause day-of-the-week anomalies in highly mispriced stock markets. Design/methodology/approach: We use a sample from the Indonesian capital market as, in the Asian region, this country is considered to have a highly mispriced capital market. We decompose the stock price index in Indonesia into speculative, less speculative, and non-speculative indexes. We employ the mean and variance regressions to control the heteroscedasticity and serial correlation. Novelties: Our novelties are two fold. We postulate a method to decompose stock price indexes in Indonesia (the JKSE, LQ 45, and Kompas 100) into speculative, less speculative, and non-speculative indexes. Secondly, we estimate the mean and variance levels simultaneously to get a robust estimation result of the anomaly. Research Findings: We empirically find that the behavior mood hypothesis is supported only during normal periods, when investors tend to be irrational and use their good mood to trade on speculative stocks on a Wednesday and sell them on Monday. In other periods, rationality and psychological effects play a role with Indonesian investors, when their mood is good they are more active in trading less speculative stocks, to avoid higher risks and earn higher returns from those less speculative and non-speculative stocks.
AB - Research Aims: This research examines investors' psychological moods which cause day-of-the-week anomalies in highly mispriced stock markets. Design/methodology/approach: We use a sample from the Indonesian capital market as, in the Asian region, this country is considered to have a highly mispriced capital market. We decompose the stock price index in Indonesia into speculative, less speculative, and non-speculative indexes. We employ the mean and variance regressions to control the heteroscedasticity and serial correlation. Novelties: Our novelties are two fold. We postulate a method to decompose stock price indexes in Indonesia (the JKSE, LQ 45, and Kompas 100) into speculative, less speculative, and non-speculative indexes. Secondly, we estimate the mean and variance levels simultaneously to get a robust estimation result of the anomaly. Research Findings: We empirically find that the behavior mood hypothesis is supported only during normal periods, when investors tend to be irrational and use their good mood to trade on speculative stocks on a Wednesday and sell them on Monday. In other periods, rationality and psychological effects play a role with Indonesian investors, when their mood is good they are more active in trading less speculative stocks, to avoid higher risks and earn higher returns from those less speculative and non-speculative stocks.
KW - anomaly
KW - behavioral finance
KW - day-of-the week
KW - decomposition
KW - Indonesia
KW - mood
KW - psychology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85135875822&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.22146/jieb.54377
DO - 10.22146/jieb.54377
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85135875822
SN - 2085-8272
VL - 35
SP - 257
EP - 269
JO - Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business
JF - Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business
IS - 3
ER -