Abstract

AbstractThis study used textual analysis of 34,209 news articles to quantify news sentiment into three main clusters—positive, negative and neutral—before analysing how they co‐move with international equity indices, using the time‐varying connectedness of Diebold and Yilmaz (2009, 2012). Better understanding of the spillover of news sentiment to stock markets could aid the decision‐making of institutional investors when strong uncertainty is present across major economies. We found that limited spillover from news sentiment to equity markets existed for both the European and international indices examined in the analysis, with spillover being stronger among smaller subsets of news articles more relevant for financial market participants. Additionally, the results indicated that, in the full sample, directional spillover was especially strong in times of larger uncertainty concerning BREXIT developments, whereas the smaller subsets, although also displaying stronger spillover during BREXIT uncertainty, revealed additional spillover peaks at times less related to major BREXIT developments. Differentiation between news about UK‐based and EU‐based companies also showed less spillover from news sentiment regarding EU‐based companies, possibly implying that investors saw BREXIT developments as less relevant for the latter.

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