PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Restricting internet searches causes stock market instability: study

Research by RMIT University has found restricting internet searches for investors increases stock market crash risk by 19%. The study looked at the ramifications on the stock market following Google's withdrawal from mainland China in 2010

2021-04-28
(Press-News.org) The research by RMIT University looked at the ramifications on the stock market following Google's withdrawal from mainland China in 2010.

It found access to unbiased information about companies' performance - aided by unrestricted internet search results - led to investors making more informed decisions.

On the flip side, search results manipulated to show overly positive information led to stocks for those companies being overvalued temporarily, increasing the stock market crash risk by 19%.

The study has been published in the Journal of Financial Economics.

Lead researcher Dr Gaoping Zheng, a lecturer in finance at RMIT, said the study showed search results influenced decisions, a challenge to previous thinking that they merely justified people's existing ideas.

"Until now it's been widely thought that unrestrictive internet searches result in bias and an overvaluation of stocks but that would mean restricting search would decrease stock market crash risk. Instead, we saw a significant jump," Zheng said.

"This suggests internet searching does not exacerbate investors' biases - instead, it facilitates their ability to access and analyse information."

The research has implications for Australia following Google's recent attempt to withdraw from the country.

"While China has alternative search engines, their results are concentrated and an identical search on Google would show vastly different results," Zheng said.

"Our research emphasises the importance of access to diverse results and if Google did decide to withdraw, it could have a destabilising impact on the economy."

Comparing China during and after Google

In 2010, Google unexpectedly withdrew its searching business from China, reducing investors' ability to find information online.

To measure the impact, researchers divided a list of Chinese firms into two groups: firms that had a high search volume on Google prior to 2010 and firms that were not regularly searched for on Google prior to 2010.

By averaging the stock price cash risk of both groups after Google withdrew and comparing their standard deviation, the researchers found firms that were regularly searched for on Google were 19% more unstable.

Zheng said while Chinese investors could still look for information about stocks using other search engines, they were more likely to be shown positively-biased information from websites hosted in China.

"Google was more likely to show content from international websites such as Bloomberg, Reuters or The New York Times, which are free from political constraints to talk about what is happening," she said.

"Investors were more likely to overvalue stocks due to biased information found through Chinese-owned search engines."

Zheng said restricted searches gave firms opportunities to hide adverse news from the public, preventing potential investors from discovering accurate information online.

"If managers withhold negative news, investors are less likely to mitigate their misconceptions and biases surrounding a certain stock," she said.

"Let's say I believed that eating carrots could cure cancer and searched the internet to confirm this. An unrestricted search would correct my bias because I would find that carrots are not actually a cure for cancer."

INFORMATION:

'Internet searching and stock price crash risk: Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment', with Yongxin Xu from Monash University and Yuhao Xuan from Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, is published in the Journal of Financial Economics (DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfineco.2021.03.003).



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Early MR scans found more people with broken-heart syndrome

2021-04-28
In almost ten per cent of myocardial infarctions, no obvious cause in the coronary artery can be found. Some of the patients are diagnosed with broken-heart syndrome, while others are left without a diagnosis. A new study from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden suggests that early magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the heart can greatly increase the rate of diagnosis. The study has been published in the journal JACC Cardiovascular Imaging. Myocardial infarction is one of the most common diseases in the West, and is usually caused by a blood clot that blocks the coronary artery on the heart's surface. However, in up to ten per cent of all myocardial infarctions, no obvious cause ...

The state of China's climate in 2020: Warmer and wetter again

The state of Chinas climate in 2020: Warmer and wetter again
2021-04-28
The National Climate Center (NCC) of China has just completed a report that gives an authoritative assessment of China's climate in 2020. It provides a summary of China's climate as well as the major weather and climate events that took place throughout the year. This is the third consecutive year that the NCC has published an annual national climate statement in Atmospheric and Oceanic Science Letters (AOSL). "Against the background of global warming, extreme weather and climate events occur more frequently and have wide influence on society and economies. Last year, floods, droughts, typhoons, low-temperature freezing and snow disasters, and dust storms attacked ...

Cognitive neuroscience could pave the way for emotionally intelligent robots

Cognitive neuroscience could pave the way for emotionally intelligent robots
2021-04-28
Ishikawa, Japan - Human beings have the ability to recognize emotions in others, but the same cannot be said for robots. Although perfectly capable of communicating with humans through speech, robots and virtual agents are only good at processing logical instructions, which greatly restricts human-robot interaction (HRI). Consequently, a great deal of research in HRI is about emotion recognition from speech. But first, how do we describe emotions? Categorical emotions such as happiness, sadness, and anger are well-understood by us but can be hard for robots to register. Researchers have focused on "dimensional emotions," which constitute a gradual emotional transition in natural speech. "Continuous dimensional ...

Study of marine noise highlights need to protect pristine Australian waters

2021-04-28
New Curtin research has found urgent action is needed to ensure man-made underwater noise in Australian waters does not escalate to levels which could be harmful to marine animals, such as whales, and negatively impact our pristine oceans. Lead author Professor Christine Erbe, Director of Curtin's Centre for Marine Science and Technology, said recent studies from the northern hemisphere showed man-made noise, in particular from ships, often dominates the underwater soundscape over large areas, such as entire seas, and could interfere with marine fauna that rely on sound for communication, navigation and foraging. "When ...

A simple exercise goal protects against unhealthy weight gain

2021-04-28
New research shows that physical activity equivalent to 100 PAI a week can counteract excessive weight gain. PAI stands for Personal Activity Intelligence and tracks how physically active you are throughout the week. You can measure PAI with just about any device that can measure heart rate. The activity metric has been developed by the Cardiac Exercise Research Group (CERG) at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) under the leadership of NTNU Professor Ulrik Wisløff. "Previously, we found that 100 PAI a week can give us a longer and healthier life without cardiovascular disease. Our new study shows that PAI can also help people maintain a healthy body weight," says researcher Javaid ...

More sleep or more exercise: the best time trade-offs for children's health

More sleep or more exercise:  the best time trade-offs for childrens health
2021-04-28
More sleep could offset children's excess indulgence over the school holidays as new research from the University of South Australia shows that the same decline in body mass index may be achieved by either extra sleep or extra exercise. The striking new finding is part of a study that shows how children can achieve equivalent physical and mental health benefits by choosing different activity trade-offs across the 24-hour day. Conducted in partnership with the Murdoch Children's Research Institute, and supported by the National Heart Foundation of Australia, the team examined the optimal balance between children's physical activity, sleep, and sedentary time across the 24-hour day to better inform tailored ...

Researchers use a nanoscale synthetic antiferromagnet to toggle nonlinear spin dynamics

Researchers use a nanoscale synthetic antiferromagnet to toggle nonlinear spin dynamics
2021-04-28
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- Researchers at the University of California, Riverside, have used a nanoscale synthetic antiferromagnet to control the interaction between magnons -- research that could lead to faster and more energy-efficient computers. In ferromagnets, electron spins point in the same direction. To make future computer technologies faster and more energy-efficient, spintronics research employs spin dynamics -- fluctuations of the electron spins -- to process information. Magnons, the quantum-mechanical units of spin fluctuations, interact with each other, leading to nonlinear features of the spin dynamics. Such nonlinearities play a central ...

Bone collagen of fish shows individual history of migration and feeding habits

Bone collagen of fish shows individual history of migration and feeding habits
2021-04-28
Collagen is a protein found widely in almost all cells of animals, and scientifically can be used to learn much about an animal's life history including human being in the present or in the past. Scientists at the Research Institute for Humanity and Nature (RIHN) and Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency (FRA), Japan, prove this point for Japanese flounder by measuring isotope ratios in vertebral-bone collagen. The new study, which can be read in Marine Biology, shows that there exist behavioral groups of fish with different migrating and/or feeding patterns. A school of fish will decide their habitat on fundamental needs for survival, ...

Lactic acid bacteria can extend the shelf life of foods

2021-04-28
Researchers at the National Food Institute have come up with a solution that can help combat both food loss and food waste: They have generated a natural lactic acid bacterium, which secretes the antimicrobial peptide nisin, when grown on dairy waste. Nisin is a food-grade preservative, which can extend the shelf life of foods, and thus can be used to reduce food waste. The discovery also makes it possible to better utilize the large quantities of whey generated when cheese is made. Nisin is approved for use in a number of foods, where it can prevent the growth of certain spoilage microorganisms as well as microorganisms that make consumers sick. It can for instance inhibit spore ...

Dead lithium: The culprit of low Coulombic efficiency with LIBs

2021-04-28
The target of carbon-neutral and net-zero emissions is the development and utilization of renewable energy. High-energy-density energy storage systems are critical technologies for the integration of renewable energy. Li metal is highly recognized as a promising alternative anode for next-generation rechargeable batteries due to its high theoretical capacity of 3860 mAh g-1 and ultralow electrode potential of -3.04 V compared to the standard hydrogen electrode. However, Li metal batteries' (LMBs) main issue is their low Coulombic efficiency (CE), which limits batteries' cycle life. The low CE in LMBs occurs ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Researchers watch a single catalytic grain do work in real time

AI that measures its own uncertainty could improve liver cancer detection

City of Hope study demonstrates proof of concept for targeted new approach to treat pancreatic cancer

Flex appeal: ‘Trade-off’ between armor and efficiency in sea turtle shells

Spray drying tech used in instant coffee applied to high-capacity battery production

Understanding consumer dynamics in community-supported agriculture in Japan

Cannabidiol therapy could reduce symptoms in autistic children and teenagers

Do “completely dark” dark matter halos exist?

In Guatemala, painted altar found at Tikal adds new context to mysterious Maya history

3 schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants to boost student fitness

Urinals without splashback

Even under stress, male-female pairs had each other’s backs

Predictable visual stimuli as an early indicator for autism spectrum disorder in children

AI threats in software development revealed in new study from The University of Texas at San Antonio

Funding to support mental health at work is failing to deliver results

The Lancet: Nearly 500,000 children could die from AIDS-related causes by 2030 without stable PEPFAR programmes, expert policy analysis estimates

Eclipse echoes: groundbreaking study reveals surprising avian vocal patterns during solar eclipse

Mirvie announces results from largest molecular study in pregnancy and clinical validation of simple blood test to predict risk for preeclampsia months before symptoms

Eating only during the daytime could protect people from heart risks of shift work

Discovery of mitochondrial protein by researchers at Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University opens path to therapeutic advances for heart and Alzheimer’s disease

Recognizing the bridge builders between neuroscience and psychiatry

Lactic acid bacteria can improve plant-based dairy alternatives

Public housing smoking ban reduced heart attacks and strokes

Positron emission tomography in psychiatry: Dr. Romina Mizrahi maps the molecular future

Post-trauma drug blocks fear response in female mice, study shows

Trees could be spying on illegal gold mining operations in the Amazon rainforest

Even after a thousand bends, performance remains uncompromised!

Survey: Women’s perceptions of perimenopause

Singapore scientists pioneer non-invasive 3D imaging to transform skin cancer management

Powerful new tool promises major advances in cancer treatment

[Press-News.org] Restricting internet searches causes stock market instability: study
Research by RMIT University has found restricting internet searches for investors increases stock market crash risk by 19%. The study looked at the ramifications on the stock market following Google's withdrawal from mainland China in 2010