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Article
Investing in Bankrupt Stocks: Is It a Sweet Trick?
Journal of Business Economics & Finance (2014)
  • Ben Branch, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • Min Xu
Abstract
We track the holding period return from investing in bankrupt stocks using a buy-and-hold strategy, buying the stocks on the bankruptcy filing date and holding them until the final resolution date (reorganization or liquidation). We find that holding a simple long position in the bankrupt stocks will generally lead to a large loss. The holding period return computed from the stock price alone cannot show the entire story. When considering final distributions plus the stock price, we seea much greater loss. In our regression analysis, we find that liquidity is always a key factor in explaining the returns. Profitability and information uncertainty plays a significant role in explaining the positive returns, while liquidity and (un)profitability are the two key issues associated with the negative returns. In addition, the involvement of hedge funds does not seem to be associated with better stock performance.
Disciplines
Publication Date
2014
Publisher Statement
The published version is located at http://www.pressacademia.org/images/documents/jbef/archives/vol_2_issue_4/03.pdf
Citation Information
Ben Branch and Min Xu. "Investing in Bankrupt Stocks: Is It a Sweet Trick?" Journal of Business Economics & Finance Vol. 2 Iss. 2 (2014)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/ben_branch/89/