OtherPapers.com - Other Term Papers and Free Essays
Search

Market Wide Herding and Its Impact on Stock Market

Essay by   •  August 23, 2011  •  Essay  •  299 Words (2 Pages)  •  1,864 Views

Essay Preview: Market Wide Herding and Its Impact on Stock Market

Report this essay
Page 1 of 2

Market wide herding and its impact on stock market

The paper tries to identify the presence of 'market-wide herding' in the Indian

capital market and whether Institutional Investors impact such Herding.

In particular, the paper looks at the impact of FII Flows as well as mutual funds on

herding. The work also looks at the the impact of index return and volatility on

herding.

The Indian economy embarked on a process of liberalisation in 1992 and since

then the Indian capital markets have been on a process of integration with the global

markets. Over the last decade, India has attracted investments from Foreign

Institutional Investors (FIIs) from across the world, the initial trickle ballooning into a

torrent. Fund mobilisation by domestic institutional investors like Mutual Funds (MFs)

has been increasing in view of the increasing rate. Like any other developing

economy, the Indian capital markets have welcomed institutional investors as they

provide the much-needed liquidity for the markets; however, the increased role of

the institutional investor, particularly the FII has also lead to a rise in negative

perceptions about their impact on the markets. The issue of stability of the financial

markets thus gained prominence.

The Indian economy embarked on a process of liberalisation in 1992 and since

then the Indian capital markets have been on a process of integration with the global

markets. Over the last decade, India has attracted investments from Foreign

Institutional Investors (FIIs) from across the world, the initial trickle ballooning into a

torrent. Fund mobilisation by domestic institutional investors like Mutual Funds (MFs)

has been increasing in view of the increasing rate. Like any other developing

economy, the Indian capital markets have welcomed institutional investors as they

provide the much-needed liquidity for the markets; however, the increased role of

the institutional investor, particularly the FII has also lead to a rise in negative

perceptions

...

...

Download as:   txt (2.1 Kb)   pdf (43.9 Kb)   docx (9 Kb)  
Continue for 1 more page »
Only available on OtherPapers.com