Abstract

ABSTRACT This study analysed media agenda-building and intermedia agenda-setting in the context of IPOs, a news setting that is considered highly routinised and standardised, to shed light on both the direct and indirect influence of financial information subsidies on the news. Automatic content analysis was used to record the salience of different IPO issues in the press releases for IPOs listed on the main board of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, and in the subsequent news reports. The relationships among the frequency counts of IPO issues were analysed using Poisson regression and zero-inflated Poisson regression to provide a more accurate understanding of the effects of press releases on the financial news via two pathways: agenda-building from source to media, and intermedia agenda-setting among news media at different stages of the IPO marketing period. The results provide evidence that press releases influenced the overall news agenda during the early stage of the offering period of the new stocks, although for some issues, negative or no relationships were found. In addition, issue salience in the news media during the early stage of IPOs showed significant transfer to the latter stages.

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