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Correlations and Flow of Information between The New York Times and Stock Markets

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Listed:
  • Andr'es Garc'ia-Medina
  • Leonidas Sandoval Junior
  • Efra'in Urrutia Ba~nuelos
  • A. M. Mart'inez-Arguello

Abstract

We use Random Matrix Theory (RMT) and information theory to analyze the correlations and flow of information between 64,939 news from The New York Times and 40 world financial indices during 10 months along the period 2015-2016. The set of news was quantified and transformed into daily polarity time series using tools from sentiment analysis. Results from RMT shows that a common factor lead the world indices and news, and even share the same dynamics. Furthermore, the global correlation structure has found preserved when adding white noise, which indicate that correlations are not due to sample size effects. Likewise, we found a lot of information flowing from news to world indices for specific delay, being of practical interest for trading purpose. Our results suggest a deep relationship between news and world indices, and show a situation where news drive world market movements, giving a new evidence to support behavioral finance as the current economic paradigm.

Suggested Citation

  • Andr'es Garc'ia-Medina & Leonidas Sandoval Junior & Efra'in Urrutia Ba~nuelos & A. M. Mart'inez-Arguello, 2017. "Correlations and Flow of Information between The New York Times and Stock Markets," Papers 1707.05778, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:1707.05778
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    File URL: http://arxiv.org/pdf/1707.05778
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    Cited by:

    1. Xiaoguang Huo & Feng Fu, 2017. "Risk-Aware Multi-Armed Bandit Problem with Application to Portfolio Selection," Papers 1709.04415, arXiv.org.

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