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International Journal of Business and Economics

International Journal of Business and Economics
Volume 12, No. 2

December, 2013
 
Information Spillover, Profit Opportunities, and Return Deviations Analysis: The Case of Cross-Listed BHP Billiton
 
Roger Su
Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand
 
Ronghua Yi
China Jiliang University, China
 
Keith Hooper
Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand
 
Amitabh Dutta
Florida Institute of Technology, U . S . A .
 
Abstract
This paper examines (1) whether a cross-listed company spillover effect starts from an earlier time zone market to a later time zone market, whether investors can find profit opportunities from cross-listed share trading, and (2) whether the magnitude of cross-listed share performance deviations can be sufficiently explained by market fundamental factors. BHP Billiton, the world's largest mining company, is listed on both Australian and UK stock exchanges and has become a perfect example to be examined for the above two hypotheses. We analyze BHP and BLT daily share price returns from 2001 to 2011 and most available Australian and UK market fundamental factors in the same period. With regression analysis, we find evidence that a spillover effect may start from the earlier time zone. Our findings partly support that investors can get arbitrage profit from cross-listed shares when they hold a medium-term position; in the short term, there is no strong evidence to show BHP and BLT prices will converge. Furthermore, we haven't found any evidence that any individual market fundamental factor can sufficiently explain the magnitude of cross-listed share performance deviations.
 
Keywords:spillover, BHP Billiton, arbitrage, cross listing.
 
JEL Classifications:G11, G14, G15.
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