Biography
Narasimhan Jegadeesh is the Dean's Distinguished Chair in Finance at the Goizueta Business School. He has also been on the faculty at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the University of California at Los Angeles. He has published extensively in the Journal of Finance, the Journal of Financial Economics, the Review of Financial Studies and other leading academic finance journals. His research has been discussed in several publications including Businessweek, The Economist, Forbes, Kiplinger's Personal Investments, Money, New York Times, and Smart Money.
Education
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PhD in FinanceColumbia University
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MBA in Postgraduate Diploma in ManagementIndian Institute of Management
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BTech in Mechanical EngineeringIndian Institute of Technology
Closing auctions: Nasdaq versus NYSE
Journal of Financial Economics
October 6, 2024
2022
Closing auction volume steadily increased over the last decade, and it reached a peak of about 10% of the total trading volume in 2019. We examine the price impact and resiliency of closing auctions, and we compare closing auction liquidity in Nasdaq and the NYSE...
Closing auction volume steadily increased over the last decade, and it reached a peak of about 10% of the total trading volume in 2019. We examine the price impact and resiliency of closing auctions, and we compare closing auction liquidity in Nasdaq and the NYSE...
What Do Fund Flows Reveal about Asset Pricing Models and Investor Sophistication? Get access Arrow
The Review of Financial Studies
October 6, 2024
2021
Recent evidence indicates that market model alphas are stronger predictors of mutual fund flows than alphas with other models. Some recent papers have interpreted this evidence to mean that CAPM is the best asset pricing model, but some others have interpreted it as evidence against investor sophistication. We evaluate the merits of these mutually exclusive interpretations...
Recent evidence indicates that market model alphas are stronger predictors of mutual fund flows than alphas with other models. Some recent papers have interpreted this evidence to mean that CAPM is the best asset pricing model, but some others have interpreted it as evidence against investor sophistication. We evaluate the merits of these mutually exclusive interpretations...
Empirical tests of asset pricing models with individual assets: Resolving the errors-in-variables bias in risk premium estimation
Journal of Financial Economics
October 6, 2024
2019
To attenuate an inherent errors-in-variables bias, portfolios are widely employed to test asset pricing models; but portfolios might mask relevant risk- or return-related features of individual stocks. We propose an instrumental variables approach that allows the use of individual stocks as test assets, yet delivers consistent estimates of ex post risk premiums...
To attenuate an inherent errors-in-variables bias, portfolios are widely employed to test asset pricing models; but portfolios might mask relevant risk- or return-related features of individual stocks. We propose an instrumental variables approach that allows the use of individual stocks as test assets, yet delivers consistent estimates of ex post risk premiums...
Cross-Sectional and Time-Series Tests of Return Predictability: What Is the Difference? Get access Arrow
The Review of Financial Studies
October 6, 2024
2018
We compare the performance of time-series (TS) and cross-sectional (CS) strategies based on past returns. While CS strategies are zero-net investment long/short strategies, TS strategies take on a time-varying net long investment in risky assets...
We compare the performance of time-series (TS) and cross-sectional (CS) strategies based on past returns. While CS strategies are zero-net investment long/short strategies, TS strategies take on a time-varying net long investment in risky assets...
Buyers versus Sellers: Who Initiates Trades, and When?
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis
October 6, 2024
2016
Models that examine investors’ motivations to trade often make opposite predictions about the relation between trading decisions and past returns. We find that, in the aggregate, both buyer- and seller-initiated trades increase with past returns. The difference between buyer- and seller-initiated trades is negatively related to short horizon returns but positively related to returns over longer horizons...
Models that examine investors’ motivations to trade often make opposite predictions about the relation between trading decisions and past returns. We find that, in the aggregate, both buyer- and seller-initiated trades increase with past returns. The difference between buyer- and seller-initiated trades is negatively related to short horizon returns but positively related to returns over longer horizons...
Risk and Expected Returns of Private Equity Investments: Evidence Based on Market Prices
The Review of Financial Studies
October 6, 2024
2015
We estimate the risk and expected return of private equity using market prices of publicly traded funds of funds holding unlisted private equity funds and of publicly traded private equity funds participating directly in private equity transactions...
We estimate the risk and expected return of private equity using market prices of publicly traded funds of funds holding unlisted private equity funds and of publicly traded private equity funds participating directly in private equity transactions...
Word Power: A New Approach for Content Analysis
Journal of Financial Economics
October 6, 2024
2013
We present a new approach for content analysis to quantify document tone. We find a significant relation between our measure of the tone of 10-Ks and market reaction for both negative and positive words...
We present a new approach for content analysis to quantify document tone. We find a significant relation between our measure of the tone of 10-Ks and market reaction for both negative and positive words...
Buy-side trades and sell-side recommendations: Interactions and information content
Journal of Financial Markets
October 6, 2024
2012
We examine the performance of buy-side institutional investor trades and sell-side brokerage analyst stock recommendations, as well as their interactions...
We examine the performance of buy-side institutional investor trades and sell-side brokerage analyst stock recommendations, as well as their interactions...
Momentum
SSRN Electronic Journal
October 6, 2024
2011
There is substantial evidence that indicates that stocks that perform the best (worst) over a three to 12 month period tend to continue to perform well (poorly) over the subsequent three to 12 months. This article reviews the momentum literature and discusses some of the explanations for this phenomenon...
There is substantial evidence that indicates that stocks that perform the best (worst) over a three to 12 month period tend to continue to perform well (poorly) over the subsequent three to 12 months. This article reviews the momentum literature and discusses some of the explanations for this phenomenon...