On the Source of Contrarian and Momentum Strategies in the Italian Equity Market

International Review of Financial Analysis, Vol. 13, No. 3, Autumn 2004

Posted: 16 May 2006

See all articles by Stefano Mengoli

Stefano Mengoli

University of Bologna - Department of Management

Abstract

This paper investigates the source of momentum profits, while inferring the validity of the assumptions underlying rational and behavioural theories. Using a unique sample of securities listed in the Italian Stock Exchange from 1950 to 1995, we observe that buying better performing stocks in the previous 3-12 months and selling worse performing stocks over the same period yields significant profits in the short term (less than 1 year). Results also hold when conditioned upon different risk specifications. On the other hand, the continuation effect seems to significantly revert over a longer period. More importantly, in contrast with Conrad and Kaul [Rev. Financ. Stud. 11 (1998) 489], bootstrap and Monte Carlo simulations show that momentum profits are more likely to be generated by stock returns time series properties rather than by their cross-sectional differences. While the overall findings cannot reject the market efficiency hypothesis, we argue that behavioural theory may be a possible story to interpret the continuation effect.

Keywords: Momentum, Contrarian, Market efficiency, Bootstrap, Monte Carlo simulations

JEL Classification: G12

Suggested Citation

Mengoli, Stefano, On the Source of Contrarian and Momentum Strategies in the Italian Equity Market. International Review of Financial Analysis, Vol. 13, No. 3, Autumn 2004, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=901564

Stefano Mengoli (Contact Author)

University of Bologna - Department of Management ( email )

Via Capo di Lucca, 24
http://stefanomengoli.weebly.com/
Bologna, Bologna 40132
Italy

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