The Impact of Investor Sentiment on the "leverage Effect"

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2016

Authors

Son-Turan, Semen

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Econometric Research Association

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Journal Issue

Abstract

With the advent of the Internet and the availability of user search query data on a broaderscale, since the early 2000s researchers have started using collective search queryinformation instead of, or, in addition to, traditional investor sentiment proxies. Thisstudy examines whether the leverage (bad news) effect, as measured by theEGARCH (1,1) model, changes with the inclusion of a newly emerging sentiment proxy,internet search volume. The sample consists of 14 US companies belonging to theNASDAQ and NYSE Indices and 501 observations of data collected at weekly frequencyspanning a nine year period. Empirical findings suggest that, inclusion of the investorsentiment variable has no clear impact on the bad news effect; there is, however, adiscernible increase in volatility persistence. The implications of the findings are that theinvestor sentiment proxy has additional informational content. Behavioral finance theoryand the availability and social proof heuristics serve as potential explanations for suchfindings.

Description

Keywords

Investor Sentiment, Leverage Effect, EGARCH, Behavioral Finance, Internet Search Queries

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

Son-Turan, S. (2016). The Impact of Investor Sentiment on the'Leverage Effect'. International Econometric Review, 8(1), 4-18.

WoS Q

N/A

Scopus Q

N/A

Source

International Econometric Review (IER)

Volume

8

Issue

1

Start Page

4

End Page

18
Page Views

210

checked on Dec 15, 2025

Downloads

79

checked on Dec 15, 2025

Google Scholar Logo
Google Scholar™

Sustainable Development Goals