Giving Content to Investor Sentiment: The Role of Media in the Stock Market
51 Pages Posted: 21 Mar 2005
Abstract
I quantitatively measure the nature of the media's interactions with the stock market using daily content from a popular Wall Street Journal column. I find that high media pessimism predicts downward pressure on market prices followed by a reversion to fundamentals, and unusually high or low pessimism predicts high market trading volume. These results and others are consistent with theoretical models of noise and liquidity traders. However, the evidence is inconsistent with theories of media content as a proxy for new information about fundamental asset values, as a proxy for market volatility, or as a sideshow with no relationship to asset markets.
Keywords: Investor sentiment, financial news media, content analysis, efficient markets
JEL Classification: G12, G14
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
More than Words: Quantifying Language to Measure Firms' Fundamentals
By Paul C. Tetlock, Maytal Saar-tsechansky, ...
-
Is All that Talk Just Noise? The Information Content of Internet Stock Message Boards
By Murray Z. Frank and Werner Antweiler
-
Media Coverage and the Cross-Section of Stock Returns
By Lily H. Fang and Joel Peress
-
When is a Liability not a Liability? Textual Analysis, Dictionaries, and 10-Ks
By Tim Loughran and Bill Mcdonald
-
Do Stock Market Investors Understand the Risk Sentiment of Corporate Annual Reports?
By Feng Li
-
Yahoo! For Amazon: Sentiment Parsing from Small Talk on the Web
By Sanjiv Ranjan Das and Mike Y. Chen
-
By Zhi Da, Joseph Engelberg, ...
-
By Joshua D. Coval and Tyler Shumway
-
The Impact of Credibility on the Pricing of Managerial Textual Content
By Elizabeth Demers and Clara Vega
-
By Feng Li