11 research outputs found

    Mood and the Market: Can Press Reports of Investors’ Mood Predict Stock Prices?

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    We examined whether press reports on the collective mood of investors can predict changes in stock prices. We collected data on the use of emotion words in newspaper reports on traders’ affect, coded these emotion words according to their location on an affective circumplex in terms of pleasantness and activation level, and created indices of collective mood for each trading day. Then, by using time series analyses, we examined whether these mood indices, depicting investors’ emotion on a given trading day, could predict the next day’s opening price of the stock market. The strongest findings showed that activated pleasant mood predicted increases in NASDAQ prices, while activated unpleasant mood predicted decreases in NASDAQ prices. We conclude that both valence and activation levels of collective mood are important in predicting trend continuation in stock prices

    Telephone magazine; an illustrated monthly magazine.

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    Vols. 1-2 include a "Syntopical index to current electrical literature".Editors: Fred De Land, L. L. Summers, J. C. McMynn, F. A. C. Perrine, C. E. Kammeyer and others.Vols. 1-2 include a "Syntopical index to current electrical literature".Mode of access: Internet

    How and When Does Customer Orientation Influence Frontline Employee Job Outcomes? A Meta-Analytic Evaluation

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