Media Co-Coverage and Overreaction in Cross-Industry Information Transfers

被引:0
|
作者
Xia, Jingjing [1 ,3 ]
Zhang, Rengong [2 ]
机构
[1] Wenzhou Kean Univ, Accounting Dept, Wenzhou, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Ottawa, Accounting Dept, Ottawa, ON, Canada
[3] 88 Daxue Rd, Wenzhou, Zhejiang, Peoples R China
关键词
Media co-coverage; Information transfers; Earnings news; Overreaction; EARNINGS ANNOUNCEMENTS; TERRORIST ATTACKS; FINANCIAL-MARKETS; STOCK; NEWS; INVESTOR; IMPACT; UNDERREACTION; JOURNALISTS; ATTENTION;
D O I
10.1080/09638180.2023.2218410
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
This study examines whether media co-coverage - a phenomenon where multiple firms are simultaneously mentioned in the same news article as contextual information - induces excessive inter-industry information transfers between two firms due to the increased saliency of their relationship. Using firms from different product market industries that are co-covered in the same Wall Street Journal article, we find that, after co-coverage, the stock price of a co-covered focal firm reacts positively to the earnings surprise of another early-announcing co-covered peer, followed by a reversal on the focal firm's subsequent earnings announcement day, while there is no reaction to the peer's earnings news in the pre-co-coverage period. Further analysis suggests that the transfer and the reversal are stronger when the co-coverage information is more salient to investors, and are concentrated among firms with more active retail trading. These findings suggest that co-coverage in financial media, through the saliency effect, can lead to inefficient cross-industry information transfers.
引用
收藏
页码:1895 / 1921
页数:27
相关论文
共 25 条
  • [1] Overreaction to intra-industry information transfers?
    Thomas, Jacob
    Zhang, Frank
    JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 2008, 46 (04) : 909 - 940
  • [2] Product Market Competition and Overreaction to Intra-Industry Information Transfers
    Kitagawa, Norio
    JAPANESE ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2021, 11 : 1 - 32
  • [3] On the efficiency of intra-industry information transfers: The dilution of the overreaction anomaly
    Chung, Dennis Y.
    Hrazdil, Karel
    Trottier, Kim
    JOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE, 2015, 60 : 153 - 167
  • [4] A structural analysis of media convergence: Cross-industry mergers and acquisitions in the information industries
    Chon, BS
    Choi, JH
    Barnett, GA
    Danowski, JA
    Joo, SH
    JOURNAL OF MEDIA ECONOMICS, 2003, 16 (03) : 141 - 157
  • [5] Information and communication technology in cross-industry glossaries
    Pronichev, A. N.
    Polyakov, E. V.
    Nikitaev, V. G.
    Vasilyev, N. P.
    Dmitrieva, V. V.
    Ulina, I. V.
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PARTICLE PHYSICS AND ASTROPHYSICS, 2017, 798
  • [6] Information and communication technology in retailing: A cross-industry comparison
    Gil-Saura, Irene
    Berenguer-Contri, Gloria
    Ruiz-Molina, Maria-Eugenia
    JOURNAL OF RETAILING AND CONSUMER SERVICES, 2009, 16 (03) : 232 - 238
  • [7] Information Content and Value Relevance of Depreciation: A Cross-Industry Analysis
    Kang, Sok-Hyon
    Zhao, Yuping
    ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2010, 85 (01): : 227 - 260
  • [8] Cross-industry information sharing among colleagues and analyst research
    Huang, Allen H.
    Lin, An -Ping
    Zang, Amy Y.
    JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING & ECONOMICS, 2022, 74 (01):
  • [9] Threats and countermeasures for information system security: A cross-industry study
    Yeh, Quey-Jen
    Chang, Arthur Jung-Ting
    INFORMATION & MANAGEMENT, 2007, 44 (05) : 480 - 491
  • [10] Rock Mars: cross-industry collaboration on a rich media educational experience
    Lachman, Richard
    Clare, Adam
    Lieberman, Wili
    WORLD CONFERENCE ON LEARNING, TEACHING AND ADMINISTRATION PAPERS, 2010, 9