Fractional differencing in stock market price and online presence of global tourist corporations

This work aims to explore the behavior of stock market prices according to the autoregressive fractional differencing integrated moving average model. This behavior will be compared with a measure of online presence, search engine results as measured by Google Trends. Design/methodology/approach The...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of Economics, Finance and Administrative Science Vol. 24; no. 48; pp. 194 - 204
Main Authors Flores-Muñoz, Francisco, Báez-García, Alberto Javier, Gutiérrez-Barroso, Josué
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bingley Emerald Publishing Limited 01.07.2019
Universidad ESAN, Peru
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Emerald Publishing
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:This work aims to explore the behavior of stock market prices according to the autoregressive fractional differencing integrated moving average model. This behavior will be compared with a measure of online presence, search engine results as measured by Google Trends. Design/methodology/approach The study sample is comprised by the companies listed at the STOXX® Global 3000 Travel and Leisure. Google Finance and Yahoo Finance, along with Google Trends, were used, respectively, to obtain the data of stock prices and search results, for a period of five years (October 2012 to October 2017). To guarantee certain comparability between the two data sets, weekly observations were collected, with a total figure of 118 firms, two time series each (price and search results), around 61,000 observations. Findings Relationships between the two data sets are explored, with theoretical implications for the fields of economics, finance and management. Tourist corporations were analyzed owing to their growing economic impact. The estimations are initially consistent with long memory; so, they suggest that both stock market prices and online search trends deserve further exploration for modeling and forecasting. Significant differences owing to country and sector effects are also shown. Originality/value This research contributes in two different ways: it demonstrate the potential of a new tool for the analysis of relevant time series to monitor the behavior of firms and markets, and it suggests several theoretical pathways for further research in the specific topics of asymmetry of information and corporate transparency, proposing pertinent bridges between the two fields.
ISSN:2218-0648
2077-1886
2218-0648
2077-1886
DOI:10.1108/JEFAS-01-2018-0013