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Nowcasting Stock Implied Volatility with Twitter

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  • Thomas Dierckx
  • Jesse Davis
  • Wim Schoutens

Abstract

In this study, we predict next-day movements of stock end-of-day implied volatility using random forests. Through an ablation study, we examine the usefulness of different sources of predictors and expose the value of attention and sentiment features extracted from Twitter. We study the approach on a stock universe comprised of the 165 most liquid US stocks diversified across the 11 traditional market sectors using a sizeable out-of-sample period spanning over six years. In doing so, we uncover that stocks in certain sectors, such as Consumer Discretionary, Technology, Real Estate, and Utilities are easier to predict than others. Further analysis shows that possible reasons for these discrepancies might be caused by either excess social media attention or low option liquidity. Lastly, we explore how our proposed approach fares throughout time by identifying four underlying market regimes in implied volatility using hidden Markov models. We find that most added value is achieved in regimes associated with lower implied volatility, but optimal regimes vary per market sector.

Suggested Citation

  • Thomas Dierckx & Jesse Davis & Wim Schoutens, 2022. "Nowcasting Stock Implied Volatility with Twitter," Papers 2301.00248, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2301.00248
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    3. Wang, Guocheng & Wang, Yanyi, 2018. "Herding, social network and volatility," Economic Modelling, Elsevier, vol. 68(C), pages 74-81.
    4. Schnaubelt, Matthias & Fischer, Thomas G. & Krauss, Christopher, 2020. "Separating the signal from the noise – Financial machine learning for Twitter," Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, Elsevier, vol. 114(C).
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