The role of media in the credit crunch: The case of the banking sector

Date

2011-10-22

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Using a Vector Autoregression framework, this paper investigates the dynamic relationship between the intensity of negative media speculation and the market performance of financial institutions. Evidence is provided that over the sub-prime crisis period pessimistic coverage Granger-caused the returns on banking indices, while causality in the opposite direction proved weaker. These findings may imply that journalists not only report on the state of economic reality, but also play an active role in creating it. Investors acting upon sentiment implicit in media reports would have been able to improve their investment performance, as measured by Sharpe ratios and Jensen’s alphas.

Description

Keywords

Media, stock markets, financial crisis, self fufilling prophecies

Citation

Lambe, B. and Wisniewski, T. (2013) The role of media in the credit crunch: The case of the banking sector. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 85, pp. 163-175

Rights

Research Institute