Open-Market Repurchases, Firm Quality, and Discouraging Short Sellers

Authors

  • W. Paul Spurlin Mississippi State University - Meridian

Keywords:

business, economics research, Discretionary Accruals, Stock Repurchase, Short Sales

Abstract

Announcing an open-market repurchase (OMR) is presented as a potential tool for managers to discourage short selling in their firm’s stock. Empirical testing determines the relation that abnormal short selling that follows an OMR announcement has with abnormal returns during the announcement period and announcing firm quality. Results show that post-announcement abnormal short sales decrease with positive abnormal returns during the OMR announcement period but that announcing firm quality is unrelated to the level of post-announcement abnormal short sales. Therefore, announcing an OMR may be an effective tool to discourage short sales in a firm’s stock independent of firm quality because abnormal returns around an OMR announcement tend to be positive and short sellers do not appear to distinguish among announcing firms based on firm quality.

Downloads

Published

2016-10-03

How to Cite

Spurlin, W. P. (2016). Open-Market Repurchases, Firm Quality, and Discouraging Short Sellers. Journal of Business & Economics Research, 14(4). Retrieved from https://journals.klalliance.org/index.php/JBER/article/view/90

Issue

Section

Articles