Explaining Abnormal Returns from Insider Purchases A study on insider purchases in large vs small cap firms
Abstract
This study examines insider trading with the purpose of investigating if insider purchases on
publicly traded Swedish firms generate abnormal returns. The study also focuses on whether
abnormal returns differ depending on specific firm- and market-variables. The analysis is
based on insider purchases between 2022 and 2024, using event study methodology to
calculate cumulative abnormal returns for the two groups: large and small cap firms. A
200-day estimation window and a 8-day event window are applied to capture the entire effect
of the insider purchase. In addition, regression analysis is used to investigate if the variables;
insider position, trade value, and market volatility, can explain the variation in abnormal
returns. The results show that insider purchases are followed by statistically significant
positive abnormal returns, with small cap firms generating significantly higher Cumulative
Abnormal Returns (CAR). Regression findings indicate that insider position, trade value, and
volatility significantly influence the size of abnormal return, also suggesting that insider
purchases are a stronger signal in small cap firms with greater information asymmetry. The
results contribute to the existing literature by using recent data to show that abnormal returns
exist in the Swedish markets and are larger in small cap firms.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2025-06-25Author
Berggren, Axel
Östman, Edvin
Keywords
Insider Trading
Signaling Theory
Information Asymmetry
Cummulative Abnormal Retur (CAR)
Cummulative Average Abnormal Return (CAAR)
Series/Report no.
202506:257
Language
eng