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Overconfidence bias and stock market volatility in Ghana: testing the rationality of investors in the Covid-19 era

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dc.contributor.author Kuranchie-Pong R.
dc.contributor.author Forson J.A.
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-31T15:05:02Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-31T15:05:02Z
dc.date.issued 2022
dc.identifier.issn 20400705
dc.identifier.other 10.1108/AJEMS-05-2021-0209
dc.identifier.uri http://41.74.91.244:8080/handle/123456789/190
dc.description Kuranchie-Pong, R., Department of Applied Finance and Policy Management, University of Education Winneba, Winneba, Ghana; Forson, J.A., Department of Applied Finance and Policy Management, University of Education Winneba, Winneba, Ghana en_US
dc.description.abstract Purpose: The paper tests the overconfidence bias and volatility on the Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE) during the pre-Covid-19 pandemic and Covid-19 pandemic period. Design/methodology/approach: The study employs pairwise Granger causality to test the presence of overconfidence bias on the Ghana stock market as well as GARCH (1,1) and GJR-GARCH (1, 1) models to understand whether overconfidence bias contributed to volatility during pre-Covid-19 pandemic and Covid-19 pandemic period. The pre-Covid-19 pandemic period spans from January, 2019 to December, 2019, and Covid-19 pandemic period spans from January, 2020 to December, 2020. Findings: The paper finds a unidirectional Granger causality running from weekly market returns to weekly trading volume during the Covid-19 pandemic period. These results indicate the presence of overconfidence bias on the Ghana stock market during the Covid-19 pandemic period. Finally, the conditional variance estimation results showed that excessive trading of overconfident market players significantly contributes to the weekly volatility observed during the Covid-19 pandemic period. Research limitations/implications: The empirical findings demonstrate that market participants on the GSE exhibit conditional irrationality in their investment decisions during the Covid-19 pandemic period. This implies investors overreact to private information and underreact to available public information and as a result become overconfident in their investment decisions. Practical implications: Findings from this paper show that there is evidence of overconfidence bias among market players on the GSE. Therefore, investors, financial advisors and other market players should be educated on overconfidence bias and its negative effect on their investment decisions so as to minimize it, especially during the pandemic period. Originality/value: This study is a maiden one that underscores investors� overconfidence bias in the wake of a pandemic in the Ghanaian stock market. It is a precursor to the overconfidence bias discourse and encourages the testing of other behavioral biases aside what is understudied during the Covid-19 pandemic period in Ghana. � 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited. en_US
dc.publisher Emerald Group Holdings Ltd. en_US
dc.subject Covid-19 en_US
dc.subject GARCH en_US
dc.subject GJR-GARCH en_US
dc.subject Granger-causality en_US
dc.subject GSE en_US
dc.subject Overconfidence bias en_US
dc.title Overconfidence bias and stock market volatility in Ghana: testing the rationality of investors in the Covid-19 era en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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