Herding or Anti-Herding? Understanding Investor Behavior in the Baltic States

Authors

  • Júlio Lobão University of Porto – School of Economics and Management and CEF.UP, Portugal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5755/j01.ee.36.4.36704

Keywords:

herding behavior, COVID-19 pandemic, international diversification, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania

Abstract

This paper investigates market-wide herding behavior in the stock markets of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, employing measures that assess the proximity of market returns to market consensus. Using a survivor-bias-free dataset of daily stock returns, we document significant anti-herding behavior among investors in Latvia and Lithuania throughout the sample period. Results for the Estonian market vary based on the herding measure chosen. Herding dynamics fluctuate over time, with the COVID-19 pandemic increasing the intensity of the effect in Estonia and Lithuania. Moreover, the deterioration of investor sentiment and stronger funding restrictions are found to amplify herding in these two markets. Estonia's market displays asymmetric behavior, with herding being more pronounced during negative market performance. Collectively, these findings are relevant to management practice since they suggest that it is difficult to extract the desired benefits of international diversification in the Baltic region, especially during market downturns.

Author Biography

  • Júlio Lobão, University of Porto – School of Economics and Management and CEF.UP, Portugal

    Júlio Lobão is a Professor of Finance at the School of Economics and Management, University of Porto, Portugal. His areas of research interest lie in financial markets and behavioral finance. He previously worked as a financial consultant in the finance sector. He is (co)author of 8 books, 12 book chapters, and numerous peer-reviewed articles in journals such as the Journal of Behavioral Finance, Review of Behavioral Finance, International Journal of Finance and Economics, Studies in Economics and Finance, and Research in International Business and Finance. ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5896-9648

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Published

2025-10-23

Issue

Section

Journal General Track