Time Variation in Extrapolation and Anomalies
Abstract
We find that the degree of extrapolative weighting in investors’ beliefs (DOX) has strong predictive power for a broad set of overreaction-related anomalies in the stock market. The average return spread of these anomalies is about per month following high DOX periods and per month following low DOX periods. In sharp contrast, DOX has opposite, but weaker, predictive power for underreaction-related anomalies. In addition, the predictive power of DOX is robust after controlling for a broad set of economic forces. Moreover, most of the DOX effect on long-short anomaly returns derives from the short legs of these overreaction-related anomalies, suggesting that time variation in DOX leads to more time variation in overpricing than in underpricing, probably because of short-sale impediments.
This paper was accepted by Lukas Schmid, finance.
Funding: Z. Su received financial support from Lingnan University [Faculty Research Grants DB25A5 and 103664]. Y. Wang received financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China [Grant 72503264]. J. Yu received financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China [Grants 72141304 and 72342020].
Supplemental Material: The online appendix and data files are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2024.06850.

