Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where James M. Steeley is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by James M. Steeley.


Journal of Banking and Finance | 2001

A note on information seasonality and the disappearance of the weekend effect in the UK stock market

James M. Steeley

The weekend effect in UK stock prices has disappeared in the 1990s. Beneath the surface however there remain systematic day-of-the-week effects only visible when returns are partitioned by the direction of the market. A systematic pattern of market-wide news arrivals into the UK stock market is discovered and found to provide an explanation for these day-of-the-week effects.


Applied Economics | 1998

Exchange controls and European stock market integration

Patricia L. Chelley-Steeley; James M. Steeley; Eric J. Pentecost

This paper examines the impact on stock price predictability that the removal of exchange controls had on major European countries during the late 1970s and 1980s. It is found that for Germany, Switzerland and France, the removal of exchange controls led to an increase in the interdependence between these and other markets. In contrast, there is little evidence of an increase in interdependence for the UK and Italy.


Applied Financial Economics | 2005

The leverage effect in the UK stock market

Patricia L. Chelley-Steeley; James M. Steeley

This study seeks to explain the leverage effect in UK stock returns by reference to the return volatility, leverage and size characteristics of UK companies. A leverage effect is found that is stronger for smaller companies and has greater explanatory power over the returns of smaller companies. The properties of a theoretical model that predicts that companies with higher leverage ratios will experience greater leverage effects are explored. On examining leverage ratio data, it is found that there is a propensity for smaller companies to have higher leverage ratios. The transmission of volatility shocks between the companies is also examined and it is found that the volatility of larger firm returns is important in determining both the volatility and returns of smaller firms, but not the reverse. Moreover, it is found that where volatility spillovers are important, they improve out-of-sample volatility forecasts.


Applied Financial Economics | 1995

Conditional volatility and firm size: an empirical analysis of UK equity portfolios

Patricia L. Chelley-Steeley; James M. Steeley

The techniques and insights from two distinct areas of financial economic modelling are combined to provide evidence of the influence of firm size on the volatility of stock portfolio returns. Portfolio returns are characterized by positive serial correlation induced by the varying levels of non-synchronous trading among the component stocks. This serial correlation is greatest for portfolios of small firms. The conditional volatility of stock returns has been shown to be well represented by the GARCH family of statistical processes. Using a GARCH model of the variance of capitalization-based portfolio returns, conditioned on the autocorrelation structure in the conditional mean, striking differences related to firm size are uncovered.


Applied Financial Economics | 2003

Making political capital: the behaviour of the UK capital markets during Election'97

James M. Steeley

This article examines the behaviour of the UK capital markets during the overnight trading period that coincided with the announcement of the results of the UK general election in May 1997. Evidence that the financial markets responded to the evolving pattern of results is found. In addition, the consensus move experienced as the markets opened the next trading day was influenced by the extent of the moves that had already occurred overnight..


Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting | 2004

Stock price distributions and news: evidence from index options

James M. Steeley

We estimate the shape of the distribution of stock prices using data from options on the underlying asset, and test whether this distribution is distorted in a systematic manner each time a particular news event occurs. In particular we look at the response of the FTSE100 index to market wide announcements of key macroeconomic indicators and policy variables. We show that the whole distribution of stock prices can be distorted on an event day. The shift in distributional shape happens whether the event is characterized as an announcement occurrence or as a measured surprise. We find that larger surprises have proportionately greater impact, and that higher moments are more sensitive to events however characterised.


Journal of Business Finance & Accounting | 1997

The Impact of Portfolio Diversification on Trading Rules Profits: Some Evidence for UK Share Portfolios

Patricia L. Chelley-Steeley; James M. Steeley

This paper demonstrates how the autocorrelation structure of UK portfolio returns is linked to dynamic interrelationships among the component securities of that portfolio. Moreover, portfolio return autocorrelation is shown to be an increasing function of the number of securities in the portfolio. Since the security interrelationships seemed to be more a product of their history of non-synchronous trading than of systematic industry-related phenomena, it should not be possible to exploit the high levels of return persistence using trading rules. We show that rules designed to exploit this portfolio autocorrelation structure do not produce economic profits.


Applied Financial Economics | 1992

Deregulation and market efficiency: evidence from the gilt-edged market

James M. Steeley

The impact of the 1986 deregulation of the British Government bond market on the level of informational efficiency in that market is examined. An analysis of bond price time-series and cross-sectional term-structure fitting suggests that the symptoms of inefficiency are fewer in number, smaller in magnitude and less systematic than those before deregulation.


Applied Financial Economics | 2004

Estimating time-varying risk premia in UK long-term government bonds

James M. Steeley

Simple models of time-varying risk premia are used to measure the risk premia in long-term UK government bonds. The parameters of the models can be estimated using nonlinear seemingly unrelated regression (NL-SUR), which permits efficient use of information across the entire yield curve and facilitates the testing of various cross-sectional restrictions. The estimated time-varying premia are found to be substantially different to those estimated using models that assume constant risk premia.


Applied Financial Economics | 2012

Price discovery for Chinese shares cross-listed in multiple markets

Patricia L. Chelley-Steeley; James M. Steeley

In this article we study the relationship between security returns cross-listed on the A share market of China and the H share market at the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong (SEHK). Most of these securities are also cross-listed on other markets. An important feature of this article is that we focus on the multilateral relationships between all cross-listed markets rather than concentrating only on the bi-lateral relationship between A and Hong Kong H shares. Using the impulse response functions and the variance decompositions from a Vector Autoregressive (VAR) process we show that the returns to the A share market are almost exclusively determined by domestic factors. In contrast, we find that the H share market is influenced by both the A share market within China and foreign stock markets elsewhere in the world. Impulse response functions suggest that innovations to the A share market and the Hong Kong H share market are partly transmitted to each other and to stock markets outside China. We show that liquidity has an important role to play in determining the impact that the home market has on cross-listed variance decompositions.

Collaboration


Dive into the James M. Steeley's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Neophytos Lambertides

Cyprus University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Farooq Ahmad

Robert Gordon University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paul D. Adams

College of Business Administration

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge