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The Interaction between Microblog Sentiment and Stock Returns: An Empirical Examination1

Shuyuan Deng1; Zhijian (James) Huang2; Atish P. Sinha3; Huimin Zhao3

1 Seidman College of Business, Grand Valley State University, Grand Rapids, MI 49504 U.S.A. · 2 Saunders College of Business, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY 14623 U.S.A. · 3 Sheldon B. Lubar School of Business, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI 53201 U.S.A.

MIS Quarterly 2018

Opinion mining of microblog messages has become a popular application of business analytics in recent times. Opinions reflected in microblogs have provided businesses with great opportunities to acquire insights into their operating environments in real time. In particular, the relationship between microblog sentiment and stock returns is of great interest to investment professionals and academic researchers across multiple disciplines. We empirically test this complex relationship in a comprehensive study. We perform vector autoregression on a data set containing close to 18 million microblog messages spanning 4 years at the market and the individual stock levels, and at the daily and the hourly frequencies. The results show that the influence of microblog sentiment on stock returns is both statistically and economically significant at the hour level. Microblog sentiment is also largely driven by movements in the market. Moreover, stock returns have a stronger influence on negative sentiment than on positive sentiment. These findings have important implications for both research and practice.

DOI
10.25300/misq/2018/14268
Volume
42 (3)
Pages
895-918
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
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