Paper ID
2155
Paper Type
full
Description
We assess the relevance of Twitter for stock-relevant information dissemination in financial markets on the single stock level. We use a unique dataset including more than 12 million Twitter feeds linked to specific firms. Using intraday data for the computation of advanced trading metrics, such as effective spreads, intraday volatility, and a daily version of the microstructure variable probability of informed trading (PIN), we measure the impact of Twitter activity on trading and information dissemination. The PIN model indicates that more uninformed than informed traders rush to the market along with rising Twitter activity. These results indicate that Twitter serves as an excellent indicator of news that is relevant for the stock market. However, we show that Twitter does not lead traditional news channels. In contrast, Twitter activity follows the market and has no predictive power with regard to future stock trading volume or volatility on the single stock level.
Recommended Citation
Kiesel, Florian; Pöppe, Thomas; Kolaric, Sascha; and Schiereck, Dirk, "Information or noise: How Twitter facilitates stock market information aggregation" (2019). ICIS 2019 Proceedings. 11.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2019/crowds_social/crowds_social/11
Information or noise: How Twitter facilitates stock market information aggregation
We assess the relevance of Twitter for stock-relevant information dissemination in financial markets on the single stock level. We use a unique dataset including more than 12 million Twitter feeds linked to specific firms. Using intraday data for the computation of advanced trading metrics, such as effective spreads, intraday volatility, and a daily version of the microstructure variable probability of informed trading (PIN), we measure the impact of Twitter activity on trading and information dissemination. The PIN model indicates that more uninformed than informed traders rush to the market along with rising Twitter activity. These results indicate that Twitter serves as an excellent indicator of news that is relevant for the stock market. However, we show that Twitter does not lead traditional news channels. In contrast, Twitter activity follows the market and has no predictive power with regard to future stock trading volume or volatility on the single stock level.