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Amuel M. Hartzmark, David H. Solomon (2013). The dividend month premium

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Finance research paper presentation slides. This presentation summarizes the study Hartzmark & Solomon (2013) on the dividend month premium, which investigates whether stocks earn abnormally high returns in months when a firm is expected to pay a dividend. Slides cover main idea, motivation, hypothesis, methodology (predicted dividend months, portfolio construction, four-factor asset pricing model, abnormal returns and volume analysis), key results (positive abnormal returns in predicted dividend months, persistence after risk adjustments, stronger effects in illiquid and high-yield stocks, return accumulation over the dividend period, post-ex-day reversals), and conclusions. Designed for students who need ready-to-use, detailed analysis with graphs, tables, and discussion points.

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AMUEL M. HARTZMARK, DAVID H. SOLOMON

THE DIVIDEND MONTH
PREMIUM
(2013)

, MAIN IDEA

The main question of the paper is whether stocks earn abnormally high returns in the months when a firm

is expected to pay a dividend, and if so, what explains this pattern.


The authors find a strong effect: stocks generate positive abnormal returns in predicted dividend months.

Importantly, these returns are not only higher compared to all other stocks in the market, but also higher

than the returns of the same dividend-paying firms in months when no dividend is expected. This result is

difficult to explain using standard risk-based explanations.


The authors argue that the most likely explanation is price pressure from dividend-seeking investors.

Before the ex-dividend date, investors who want to capture the dividend increase demand for the stock. If

arbitrageurs and liquidity providers do not fully offset this demand, stock prices are pushed upward before

the ex-dividend date and partially reverse after the dividend is paid.

, MOTIVATION

Traditional finance models typically assume perfect liquidity, meaning investors can buy or sell any amount of
a stock without affecting its price.

However, empirical evidence suggests that demand curves for stocks are downward sloping. When demand
for a stock temporarily increases, its price may rise even without new information about fundamentals.

Prior literature documents such price pressure around events like index inclusions, where increased demand
from index investors pushes stock prices upward.

This paper asks a related question:

If demand shifts in a predictable and temporary way, such as around dividend payments, can this also move
stock prices?

This is important because dividend payments are regular, visible, and predictable, which makes this setting a
strong test of market efficiency.

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Uploaded on
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Written in
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