Seasonal Anomalies: A Closer Look at the Johannesburg Stock Exchange

Authors

  • Ali F. Darrat College of Business, Louisiana Tech University
  • Bin Li Griffith Business School, Griffith University, Australia
  • Richard Chung Griffith Business School, Griffith University, Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7903/cmr.10629

Abstract

We examine seasonal anomalies in Johannesburg daily stock returns from January 1973 to September 2012. This paper focuses on three seasonal effects: day-of-the-week, beginning-of-the-month and month-of-the-year. We found no compelling evidence for either a January or December effect in the South African market. Instead, our results support the presence of strong Monday and Tuesday effects, whereby the returns on Monday and Tuesday are significantly lower than the return on the benchmark day of Wednesday. Moreover, the beginning-of-the-month effect is quite pronounced in which second and third trading day returns are significantly larger than returns in other trading days. Nevertheless, these strong day-of-the-week and beginning-of-the-month seasonal effects disappear in the post-2008 period following the global financial crisis. It appears that the South African stock market may have filtered out seasonal anomalies and become more efficient in the aftermath of the recent global financial crisis. Keywords: Seasonal anomalies, market efficiency, global financial crisis, Johannesburg Stock Exchange JEL Classifications: G14, C12 To cite this document: Hsin-An Su, Chin Hsien Hsieh, Chih-Yang Chang, and Fengyi Lin "Corporate Governance Rating System in Taiwan with Multi-Criteria Decision Making Methods", Contemporary Management Research, Vol.9, No.1, pp.3-12, 2013. Permanent link to this document: http://dx.doi.org/10.7903/cmr.10629

Author Biographies

Ali F. Darrat, College of Business, Louisiana Tech University

Ali F. Darrat is the Chase Endowed Professor of Finance & Professor of Economics at Louisiana Tech University. He holds BA from the University of Benghazi, and MA and Ph.D. from Indiana University (Bloomington). Professor Darrat’s research covers a wide area in finance and economics including the efficiency of financial and capital markets, international finance, business cycles and the economics consequences of government budget deficits. He has published more than 170 articles in refereed finance and economics journals including Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Journal of Banking and Finance, Review of Economics and Statistics, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, Southern Economic Journal and Journal of Business Research. His articles are extensively cited by other researchers in the fields (about 500 citations) and many of his articles have also been fully abstracted in the Journal of Economic Literature, Monetary Economics Abstract, and the CFA Digest. Recipient of numerous research awards, Professor Darrat has been recently listed among the 100 most prolific researchers in the world in the field of finance.

Bin Li, Griffith Business School, Griffith University, Australia

Lecturer in Finance

Richard Chung, Griffith Business School, Griffith University, Australia

Associate Professor of Finance

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Published

2013-06-30

How to Cite

Darrat, A. F., Li, B., & Chung, R. (2013). Seasonal Anomalies: A Closer Look at the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Contemporary Management Research, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.7903/cmr.10629

Issue

Section

Accounting and Finance