• Working Paper

    • The 52-Week High and Corporate Announcement Returns

      Joint work with Nils Lohmeier, Pascal Büsing, and Hannes Mohrschladt

      Abstract: We show that the directional effect of the 52-week high on short-term stock market reactions to M&As, SEOs, and earnings announcements is mechanical rather than behavioral. Stocks trading far below their 52-week high react more strongly to news, i.e., their announcement returns have higher magnitudes. Hence, for stocks far below their 52-week high, favorable (unfavorable) corporate announcements mechanically exhibit even more positive (negative) returns. Overall, our results provide a cautionary tale for interpreting supposedly behaviorally driven proxy variables.

      Available at SSRN

    • Offer Price Anchoring in Global Mergers and Acquisitions

      Joint work with Pascal Büsing, Nils Lohmeier, and Hannes Mohrschladt

      Abstract: We show that the effect of targets' 52-week highs on M&A offer prices varies systematically across countries. We explain these cross-country differences through a simple framework in which target shareholders incentivize corporate managers to consider an economically immaterial anchor. As predicted by our theoretical framework, the effect of the target's 52-week high on its M&A offer price is more pronounced in countries characterized by stringent corporate governance, stronger legal protections for shareholders, and national cultures prone to heuristic decision-making. Our results demonstrate how strict corporate governance can exacerbate inefficiencies in the market for corporate control when shareholder beliefs are biased.

      Available at SSRN