Abstract
Twitter posts covering 1,082 firms from November 2008 to June 2011 reveal that sentiment in nonlocalTwitter posts is negatively related to future returns, and this negative relation is due to nonlocal posts favoring overpriced stocks, which earn lower subsequent returns. In contrast, local posts do not exhibit this failing. Since nonlocal posts dominate socialmedia, this result highlights the danger of a naive reliance on socialmedia sentiment. The nonlocal disadvantage is larger for firms without public news and firms with higher information asymmetry, suggesting that richer information constrains the exuberance of nonlocal investors.
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CITATION STYLE
Giannini, R., Irvine, P., & Shu, T. (2018). Nonlocal disadvantage: An examination of social media sentiment. Review of Asset Pricing Studies, 8(2), 293–336. https://doi.org/10.1093/rapstu/rax020
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