Abstract

The sentiment, or “Tonality”, extracted from the narratives that accompany Federal Reserve economic forecasts (in the Greenbook) is strongly correlated with future economic performance, positively with GDP, and negatively with unemployment and inflation. More notably, Tonality conveys substantial incremental information in that it predicts errors in Federal Reserve and even in private-sector point forecasts of unemployment and GDP up to four quarters ahead. More favorable sentiment predicts economic performance that exceeds point forecasts. Higher Tonality also predicts positive monetary policy (fed funds rate) surprises and higher stock returns up to four quarters ahead. Quantile regressions suggest that much of Tonality’s forecasting power arises from its signal of downside risks to both economic performance and stock returns. If observed in real time, tonality would have been most informative about economic prospects and stock returns when economic uncertainty was high or when point forecasts called for subpar GDP growth.

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