Authors
Carlos Carvalho, Nicholas Klagge, Emanuel Moench
Publication date
2011/9/1
Journal
Journal of Empirical Finance
Volume
18
Issue
4
Pages
597-615
Publisher
North-Holland
Description
In September 2008, a six-year-old article about the 2002 bankruptcy of United Airlines' parent company resurfaced on the Internet and was mistakenly believed to be reporting a new bankruptcy filing by the company. This episode caused the company's stock price to drop by as much as 76% in just a few minutes, before NASDAQ halted trading. After the “news” had been identified as false, the stock price rebounded, but still ended the day 11.2% below the previous close. We explore this natural experiment by using a simple asset-pricing model to study the aftermath of this false news shock. We find that, after three trading sessions, the company's stock was still trading below the two-standard-deviation band implied by the model and that it returned to within one standard deviation only during the sixth trading session. On the seventh day after the episode, the stock was trading at the level predicted by the asset-pricing …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Carvalho, N Klagge, E Moench - Journal of Empirical Finance, 2011