Analysing the behavioural finance impact of 'fake news' phenomena on financial markets: a representative agent model and empirical validation

Abstract This paper proposes an original behavioural finance representative agent model, to explain how fake news’ empirical price impacts can persist in finance despite contradicting the efficient-market hypothesis. The model reconciles empirically-observed price overreactions to fake news with emp...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bryan Fong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-07-01
Series:Financial Innovation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40854-021-00271-z
Description
Summary:Abstract This paper proposes an original behavioural finance representative agent model, to explain how fake news’ empirical price impacts can persist in finance despite contradicting the efficient-market hypothesis. The model reconciles empirically-observed price overreactions to fake news with empirically-observed price underreactions to real news, and predicts a novel secondary impact of fake news: that fake news in a security amplifies underreactions to subsequent real news for the security. Evaluating the model against a large-sample event study of the 2019 Chinese ADR Delisting Threat fake news and debunking event, this paper finds strong qualitative validation for its model’s dynamics and predictions.
ISSN:2199-4730