THE EFFECTS OF MACROECONOMIC NEWS ANNOUNCEMENTS ON MEAN STOCK RETURNS

Similar documents
Macroeconomic surprise, forecast uncertainty, and stock prices

The Effect of Macroeconomic News on Stock Returns: New Evidence from Newspaper Coverage

MACRO-AUGMENTED VOLATILITY FORECASTING

Dynamic Macroeconomic Effects on the German Stock Market before and after the Financial Crisis*

Exceeding Expectations: Economic Forecasts and Underreaction to Macroeconomic Announcements

How Do Commodity Futures Respond to Macroeconomic News?

Macro News and Exchange Rates in the BRICS. Guglielmo Maria Caporale, Fabio Spagnolo and Nicola Spagnolo. February 2016

Market Reaction to Information Shocks Does the Bloomberg and Briefing.com Survey Matter?

Federal Reserve Policy s Impact On Economic Releases

Examining the impact of macroeconomic announcements on gold futures in a VAR-GARCH framework

Media Attention, Macroeconomic Fundamentals, and Stock Market Activity

Federal Reserve Policy and the Intraday Impact of Economic Releases on US Equity Markets:

Impact of the domestic and the US macroeconomic news on the Romanian stock market

Federal Reserve Policy and the Intraday Impact of Economic Releases On the U.S. Equity Markets:

Macro News and Stock Returns in the Euro Area: A VAR-GARCH-in-Mean Analysis

Transparency and the Response of Interest Rates to the Publication of Macroeconomic Data

Macroeconomic News, Business Cycles and Australian Financial Markets

Macroeconomic Announcements and Investor Beliefs at The Zero Lower Bound

Should Investors Forecast Macroeconomic News Events? Effects of Perfect Foresight on Portfolio Sharpe Ratio. By: Alex Moehring

Since the early 1980s researchers have

Macroeconomic announcements and implied volatilities in swaption markets 1

Available on Gale & affiliated international databases. AsiaNet PAKISTAN. JHSS XX, No. 2, 2012

Market Impact of Macroeconomic Announcements: Do Surprises Matter?

How important is economic news for bond markets? *

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. International Finance Discussion Papers Number 784 October 2003

The Predictive Content of High Frequency Consumer Confidence Data

The High-Frequency Impact of News on Long-Term Yields and Forward Rates: Is it Real? Meredith J. Beechey * and Jonathan H.

The importance of belief dispersion in the response of gold futures to macroeconomic announcements

Intra-day Behavior of Treasury Sector Index Option Implied Volatilities around Macroeconomic Announcements

Asymmetric response to PMI announcements in China s stock returns

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. International Finance Discussion Papers Number 830 April 2005

ANALYSIS OF MACROECONOMIC EVENTS IMPACT USING THE EVENT STUDY METHODOLOGY

Macroeconomic News and Real Estate Returns

Macroeconomic news and bank stock returns

Inflation and Stock Market Returns in US: An Empirical Study

Aggregate Earnings Surprises and Inflation Forecasts *

The Informativeness of Customer Order Flow following Macroeconomic Announcements: Evidence from Treasury Futures Markets

The Effects of Macroeconomic 'News' on High Frequency Exchange Rate Behavior

Do Both U.S. and Foreign Macro Surprises Matter for the Intraday Exchange Rate? Evidence from Japan. This version: December 16, 2008.

An Examination of the Predictive Abilities of Economic Derivative Markets. Jennifer McCabe

MODELING VOLATILITY OF US CONSUMER CREDIT SERIES

CHAPTER 10. Arbitrage Pricing Theory and Multifactor Models of Risk and Return INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS

EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEENRETURN ON BOND INDEX AND STOCK INDEX IN AMERICAN MARKET

The Short Run Impact of Scheduled Macroeconomic Announcements on the Australian Dollar during 1998

Market Risk Premium and Interest Rates

Macroeconomic Announcements and Risk Premia in the Treasury Bond Market

When No News is Good News. The decrease in Investor Fear after the FOMC announcement ADRIAN FERNANDEZ-PEREZ, BART FRIJNS*, ALIREZA TOURANI-RAD

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT (IJM)

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES MICRO EFFECTS OF MACRO ANNOUNCEMENTS: REAL-TIME PRICE DISCOVERY IN FOREIGN EXCHANGE

Stock market returns, macroeconomic activity and financial performance: Australia over the long run

Macro Factors and Volatility of Treasury Bond Returns 1

MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES AND STOCK MARKET: EVIDENCE FROM IRAN

Macro Week 1. A. Overview B. National Income Accounts; Aggregate Demand & Supply C. Business Cycles D. Understanding Central Bank Actions

The Response of Intraday ATX Returns to U.S. Macroeconomic News*

The Surprise Effect of Macro Indicators on the Options Implied Volatilities Dynamics: A Test on the United States-Germany Relationship

Real-Time Price Discovery in Stock, Bond and Foreign Exchange Markets

Information arrival, jumps and cojumps in European financial markets: Evidence using. tick by tick data

The Asymmetric Conditional Beta-Return Relations of REITs

Effects of macroeconomic news on the South African Financial Markets: A Domestic and Foreign Perspective

Nonfarm Employment, Inflationary Expectations, and Monetary Policy after the Global Financial Crisis

FORECASTING AMERICAN STOCK OPTION PRICES 1

Macroeconomic Announcements, Real-Time Covariance Structure and Asymmetry in the Interest Rate Futures Returns

The time-varying response of high yield currencies to economic news *

Why Does Aggregate Earnings Shocks Predict Future Inflation Shocks? *

An Evaluation of the Relationship Between Private and Public R&D Funds with Consideration of Level of Government

Regime changes in the relationship between stock returns and the macroeconomy

Information Flows Between Eurodollar Spot and Futures Markets *

Real-Time Macroeconomic Monitoring

Exchange Rates and Macro News in Emerging Markets

CHAPTER 10. Arbitrage Pricing Theory and Multifactor Models of Risk and Return INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS

Belief Dispersion and Order Submission Strategies in the Foreign Exchange Market

Effects of Japanese Macroeconomic Announcements on the Dollar/Yen Exchange Rate: High-Resolution Picture. Yuko Hashimoto and Takatoshi Ito

Online Appendix: Asymmetric Effects of Exogenous Tax Changes

Further Evidence on the Performance of Funds of Funds: The Case of Real Estate Mutual Funds. Kevin C.H. Chiang*

Real-Time Price Discovery in Stock, Bond and Foreign Exchange Markets *

Economics. Market Indicators Session 2

Macro News and Commodity Returns

Stefan Mero. Bachelor of Economics (Hons) Business School Accounting and Finance

THE CHANGING PROBABILITY OF A MONETARY POLICY RESPONSE TO INFLATION AND EMPLOYMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS

Real-Time Macroeconomic Monitoring

Mutual fund herding behavior and investment strategies in Chinese stock market

Can information be locked-up? Informed trading ahead of macro-news announcements

Productivity and Pay: Is the link broken?

LUND UNIVERSITY. Do sensitivity for macroeconomic announcements changes in crisis?

Yafu Zhao Department of Economics East Carolina University M.S. Research Paper. Abstract

GDP, Share Prices, and Share Returns: Australian and New Zealand Evidence

Michigan Economic Update

10 Economic Indicators You Need to Know. A quick cheat sheet for investors and traders

Exchange Rate and Economic Performance - A Comparative Study of Developed and Developing Countries

inflation expectations Has anchoring of expectations survived the crisis?

Bachelor Thesis Finance ANR: Real Estate Securities as an Inflation Hedge Study program: Pre-master Finance Date:

Economic Indicators PENARIS

Missing Events in Event Studies: Identifying the Effects of Partially-Measured News Surprises

Chapter 13 Return, Risk, and Security Market Line

The Effects of Oil Shocks on Turkish Macroeconomic Aggregates

Intro to macroeconomics. Rush October 2014

Working Paper Series. Price and trading response. information. by Magdalena Malinowska

Principles of Finance

Common Macro Factors and Their Effects on U.S Stock Returns

Do surprises in macroeconomic data releases

Transcription:

THE EFFECTS OF MACROECONOMIC NEWS ANNOUNCEMENTS ON MEAN STOCK RETURNS Choon-Shan Lai, University of Southern Indiana Anusuya Roy, University of Southern Indiana ABSTRACT This study is aimed at carrying out a preliminary investigation of the impact of macroeconomic news on mean stock returns. We regress daily returns of Standard & Poor 500 (S&P 500) index on news announcements of twenty-seven types of macroeconomic indicators from 2001 to 2004 and find a negative relationship between the index return and news announcements. INTRODUCTION How macroeconomic fundamentals are priced into stock prices has always been one of the most intriguing yet least understood fields of investment finance. With a few exceptions, evidence of systematic, direct impacts of macroeconomic fundamentals on asset prices is scanty. This lack of evidence is puzzling. The very fact that financial and business practitioners spend tremendous resources on collecting data on macroeconomic indicators show that macroeconomic indicators should have implications to asset prices and portfolio management. More recent studies use macroeconomic news announcement and/or announcement surprises (divergence between the actual value and the expected value of the macroeconomic indicators) instead of time series of macroeconomic indicators. Whether the impact, if any, of macroeconomic news announcement is due to the importance of the economic indicator itself or simply the fact that the indicator gives away information or changes expectations about other aspects of the economy remains an open question. Many assume that the first claim is reasonable. Several studies have found umps in asset prices in response to macroeconomic news and inferred from that macroeconomic fundamentals play key roles in the determination of foreign exchange rates (Goodhart et al.(1993), Almeida, Goodhart and Payne (1996), Anderson et.al (2003)) and futures contract (Balduzzi et.al (1997)). Similar studies in stock market do not produce as much success except for Flannery and Protopapadakis (2002) who find four macroeconomic indicators that have significant impacts on the aggregate stock market return. The obective of this study is to carry out a preliminary study of the impact of macroeconomic news announcement of twenty-seven economic indicators on the mean return of Standard and Poor 500 (S&P 500) index. The paper is structured as follows: Section 2 consists of a literature survey. Section 3 describes the data and methodology. Section 4 discusses the results and concludes the paper with future research plans. LITERATURE SURVEY Traditional methodologies typically involve regression asset returns on the actual value of macroeconomic variables. Money supply and inflation are the only two macro-variables that researchers have found consistent success in pursuit of links between macroeconomic fundamentals and asset returns. Bodie (1976), Fama (1981) and Geske and Roll (1983) have found negative relationship between stock index returns with unexpected inflation and changes in expected inflation. Pearce and Roley (1983, 1985) show negative relationships between stock index returns with unanticipated 2005 Proceedings of the Midwest Business Economics Association 180

increase in the money supply. Researchers have very little luck with other macroeconomic indicators. Next to none real macro series have been identified as having consistent and convincing impacts on stock returns. (See Chan, Chen, and Hsieh (1985), Chen, Roll and Ross (1986), Chen (1991), Ferson and Harvey (1991), and Chan, Karceski and Lakonishok (1998).) One of the possible reasons of these results is that data of macroeconomic variables are typically available at a lower frequency such as monthly. Other factors that affect stock returns may have masked the effects of macroeconomic fundamentals over a period as long as a month. Researchers have since turned to using daily macroeconomic news announcement as a proxy of macroeconomic variables. However, identifying meaningful relationships between macroeconomic news announcements and stock returns is still a daunting task due to possible time-varying nature of this relationship. McQueen and Roley (1993) propose that macro-announcement surprises (divergence between the actual value and expected value of macroeconomic indicators) may have different ramifications at different points of business cycles. They find that only two of their eight macro-announcement surprise series are significant in a standard regression model whereas six of the eight show significant effects on stock returns under selected economic conditions. Many studies focus on volatility instead of mean returns. Jones, Lamont and Lumsdaine (1998) use a GARCH model to find the impact of Employment and the Producer Price Index (PPI) on the volatility of daily returns of Treasury bonds. Without incorporating the surprise data as above, they manage to find significant increase in the volatility upon the arrival of macro-announcements. Ederington and Lee(1993) report that six macro announcements (Employment, Consumer Price Index (CPI), Producer Price Index (PPI), Balance of Trade (BOT), Gross National Product (GNP) and Retail Sales) significantly raise volatilities of prices of futures contracts of dollar-dm, Treasury bond and Eurodollar that last up to 15 minutes. Although the impact on volatility is relevant, the impact on mean return is generally of more interests. Studies in this aspect have been scarce and unfruitful with a few exceptions. For example, Anderson et.al (2003) find that macroeconomic news announced surprises produce conditional mean umps in foreign exchange rates. Balduzzi et.al (1997) report that more than a dozen macroeconomic news announcements impact treasury notes and bonds returns significantly. Flannery and Protopapadakis (2002), using a MGARCH model find that four out of seventeen macroeconomic announcement surprises impact the mean return of the value-weighted market portfolio of stocks significantly and another two impact the volatility of the portfolio. Flannery and Protopapadakis (2002) s work is so far the only one, to our knowledge, that finds some significant results between mean stock returns with macroeconomic news announcement. DATA and METHODOLOGY We use daily data from January 02, 2001 through December 31, 2004. Standard and Poor Index (S&P) data are obtained from finance.yahoo.com. We collect dates of macroeconomic news announcements from different sources as described below. News announcements are divided into eight categories in addition to three readings of gross domestic product (GDP): real activity, consumption, investment, government purchases, net exports, prices, money supply and forward-looking indicators. The following table lists the frequencies and data sources for each type of announcements. 2005 Proceedings of the Midwest Business Economics Association 181

Table 1 1 : Announcement Source Quarterly Announcement 1. GDP Advance BEA 2.GDP Preliminary BEA 3. GDP Final BEA Monthly Announcement Real Activity 4.Nonfarm Payroll Employment BLS 5. Retail Sales BC 6. Industrial Production FRB 7. Capacity Utilization FRB 8. Personal Income BEA 9. Consumer Credit FRB Consumption 10.Personal Consumption BEA Expenditures 11. New Home Sales BC Investment 12. Durable Goods Orders BC 13. Construction Spending BC 14. Factory Orders BC 15. Business Inventories BC Government Purchases 16. Government Budget Deficit FMS Net Exports 17. Trade Balance BEA Prices 18. Producer Price Index BLS 19. Consumer Price Index BLS Forward-looking 20. Consumer Confidence Index CB 21. NAPM index NAPM 22. Housing Starts BC 23. Index of leading indicators CB Weekly Announcements Real Activity 24. Initial Unemployment Claims ETA Money Supply 25. Money supply, M1 FRB 26. Money supply, M2 FRB 27. Money Supply, M3 FRB 1 Abbreviations: Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Bureau of the Census (BC), Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), Federal Reserve Board (FRB), National Association of Purchasing Managers (NAPM), Conference Board (CB), Financial Management Office (FMO), Employment and Training Administration (ETA). Our sample records 1003 trading days of stock returns. The mean stock returns for these days were 1228.91 and a standard deviation of 149.08. Out of these 1003 days, there was at least one news announcement in 417 days ( approximately 41%). Our model is as follows: R J t = 0 + β Dt = 1 β + ε t t=1,...t where R t = (log S t log S t-1 ). LogS t is the stock returns on the t th day. D = 1 if there is a schedulednews announcement t on day t - D t = 0 if otherwise The lag is determined by Schwartz Bayesian Criteria (SBC) and Akaike Information Criteria (AIC). RESULTS and FUTURE RESEARCH PLAN Both the SBC and AIC determined having two lags to be the appropriate model 2. Table 2 shows that one-day-lag news announcements affect stock returns negatively. Table 2: Variables Coefficients(standard errors) Intercept 0.0003(0.0006) D t-1-0.002(0.0008)* D t-2 0.001(0.001) * significant at 5% level. Our results may be confounded by several factors. First, our sample includes a bust of the high-tech stock bubbles starting from the late 2000 and the tragic 9-11 event in September, 2001. Second, we have not 2 The SBC and AIC for this model are -5910.37 and - 5925.10 respectively. 2005 Proceedings of the Midwest Business Economics Association 182

controlled for other risk factors of the index return such as January effects and weekday effects. While we will address the above issues in our future research efforts, these efforts are not without trade-off. Longer sample with fewer news announcements is very likely to undermine the link between macroeconomic indicators and stock returns. Our choice of sample period is dictated by the availability of more news announcement starting from 2001. We have run the regression on a dataset starting from 1997 that includes the historical boom period and found negative yet insignificant impact of news announcement on stock returns. In addition to controlling for January effects, weekday effects, 9-11 effects and other potential risk factors of index returns. We plan to study asymmetric effects of macroeconomic news. Veronesi (1999) claims larger responses of stock markets to bad news relative to good news in good times. Anderson et.al (2003) point out that larger surprises of news relative to previous forecasts of economic indicators lead to larger responses of foreign exchange rates to news announcements. Furthermore, we will explore the relative importance of each category of indicators on stock returns. Last but not least, in addition to using dummy variables of news announcement, we will investigate the impact of news surprise on the mean of index return. REFERENCES Almeida, A., Goodhart, C. and Payne, R.,1998, The Effects of Macroeconomic News on High Frequency Exchange Rate Behavior, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 33, 383-408. Anderson, T.G., Bollerslev, T., Diebold, F.X. and Vega, C., 2003, Micro Effects of Macro Announcements: Real-Time Price Discovery in Foreign Exchange, American Economic Review, 93, 38-62 Balduzzi, P., Elton, E.J., and Green, T.C., 1997, Economi News and the Yield Curve: Evidence from the U.S. Treasury Market, New York University Working Paper (October). Bodie (1976), Z.,1979, Common Stocks as a Hedge Against Inflation, Journal of Finance, 31, 459-470. Chan, K.C., Chen, N., Hsieh, D.A., 1985, An Exploratory Investigation of the Firm Size Effect, Journal of Financial Economics, 14, 451-471. Chan, K.C., Karceski, J., and Lakonishok, J., 1998, The Risk and Return from Factors, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 33, 159-188. Chen, N., 1991, Financial Investment Opportunities and the Macroeconomy, Journal of Finance, 46, 529-554. Chen, N., Roll, R., and Ross, S., 1986, Economic Forces and the Stock Market, Journal of Business, 56, 383-403. Ederington, L, and Lee, J.H., 1993, How Markets Process Information: News Releases and Volatility, Journal of Finance, 1161-1192. Fama, Eugene, 1981, Stock Returns, Real Activity, Inflation, and Money, American Economic Review, 71, 545-565. Ferson, W., and Harvey, C., 1991, The Variation in Economic Risk Premiums, Journal of Political Economy, 99, 385-415. Flannery, M.J. and Protopapadakis, A.A., 2002, Macroeconomic Factors Do Influence Aggregate Stock Returns, Review of Financial Studies, 15,751-782. Geske, Robert and Roll, R., 1983, The Fiscal and Monetary Linkage between Stock Returns and Inflation, Journal of Finance, 38, 1-34. Goodhart, C.A.E., Hall, S.G., Henry S.G.B and Persaran, B.,1993, News Effects in a High Frequency Model of the Sterling-Dollar Exchange Rate, Journal of Applied Econometrics, 7, 199-211. Jones, C.M., Lamont, O., and Lumsdaine, R.L., 1998, Macroeconomic News and Bond Market Volatility, Journal of Financial Economics, 47, 315-337. McQueen, Grant and Roley, V., 1993, Stock Prices, News and Business Conditions, Review of Financial Studies,6, 683-707. Pearce, D.K., and Roley, V.V., 1983, The Reaction of Stock Prices to Unanticipated Changes in Money: A Note, Journal of Finance, 38, 1323-1333. 2005 Proceedings of the Midwest Business Economics Association 183

Pearce, D.K., and Roley, V.V., 1985, Stock Prices and Economic News, Journal of Business, 58, 49-67. Veronesi, P., 1999, Stock Market Overreaction to Bad News in Good Times: A Rational Expectations Equilibrium Model, Review of Financial Studies, 12, 975-1007. 2005 Proceedings of the Midwest Business Economics Association 184