Market timing ability of Indian firms in open market repurchases
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Date
2013Author
Agarwalla, Sobhesh Kumar
Jacob, Joshy
Vasudevan, Ellapulli
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The paper examines the market timing ability of Indian firms engaged in open market repur-
chases. The study is primarily motivated by the unique disclosure feature of repurchases in
India, where the disclosures are far more frequent than in any other market. We find that
the repurchasing firms in India are able accumulate shares at favorable prices similar to the
US market. However, the cost savings do not translate into significant wealth creation for the insiders as indicated by the short-run and long-run abnormal returns. This is contrary to the evidence from markets like the US. Further, the cross-sectional variations in the cost savings from repurchase execution in India are explained by the overall market returns and not by firm characteristics. These findings contrast with that of US, where the firm characteristics significantly explain the cross-sectional variation in the savings measure. It appears that the more frequent disclosure of repurchase activity in India cripples the market timing ability by reducing the information asymmetry between the firm and the outsiders. This conclusion is further supported by the irrelevance of the past or concurrent stock returns in explaining the time variation in the repurchase activity of firms.
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