Agent expectations and news sentiment in the dynamics of price in a financial market

Publication Date

8-9-2024

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Review of Behavioral Finance

Volume

16

Issue

5

DOI

10.1108/RBF-09-2023-0237

First Page

836

Last Page

859

Abstract

Purpose: Although the effects of both news sentiment and expectations on price in financial markets have now been extensively demonstrated, the jointness that these predictors can have in their effects on price has not been well-defined. Investigating causal ordering in their effects on price can further our understanding of both direct and indirect effects in their relationship to market price. Design/methodology/approach: We use autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) methodology to examine the relationship between agent expectations and news sentiment in predicting price in a financial market. The ARDL estimation is supplemented by Grainger causality testing. Findings: In the ARDL models we implement, measures of expectations and news sentiment and their lags were confirmed to be significantly related to market price in separate estimates. Our results further indicate that in models of relationships between these predictors, news sentiment is a significant predictor of agent expectations, but agent expectations are not significant predictors of news sentiment. Granger-causality estimates confirmed the causal inferences from ARDL results. Research limitations/implications: Taken together, the results extend our understanding of the dynamics of expectations and sentiment as exogenous information sources that relate to price in financial markets. They suggest that the extensively cited predictor of news sentiment can have both a direct effect on market price and an indirect effect on price through agent expectations. Practical implications: Even traditional financial management firms now commonly track behavioral measures of expectations and market sentiment. More complete understanding of the relationship between these predictors of market price can further their representation in predictive models. Originality/value: This article extends the frequently reported bivariate relationship of expectations and sentiment to market price to examine jointness in the relationship between these variables in predicting price. Inference from ARDL estimates is supported by Grainger-causality estimates.

Keywords

Behavioral economics, C20 single equation models single variables3A general, C58 financial econometrics, Financial forecasting and simulation, G40 behavioral Finance3A general

Department

Marketing and Business Analytics

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