Announcement Effect

Announcement Effect

The announcement effect broadly refers to the impact that any type of news or public announcement — especially when issued by government or monetary authorities — has on financial markets. Researchers have suggested that bad news has a larger impact on markets than good news, and that good news does not lift the market as much as bad news depresses it. Leaking critical news can allow the market to find equilibrium, or to “discount the stock” — that is, to incorporate the unexpected news into the price of a stock. For instance, if a company's earnings are especially greater than usual one quarter, it might choose to leak the information to help ease the pressure for an unsustainable price spike at the time of the official earnings release. Also, bad news during a bear market has a bigger negative impact than bad news during a bull market, and negative surprises often have a greater impact than positive surprises. Economists, technical analysts, traders, and researchers spend a great deal of time trying to predict the effect of news or public announcements on stock prices in order to discern, among other investing strategies, the wisdom of switching between asset classes or moving in and out of the market altogether.

The announcement effect refers to the influence that company headlines, news stories, and social media play in influencing investor behavior.

What Is the Announcement Effect?

The announcement effect broadly refers to the impact that any type of news or public announcement — especially when issued by government or monetary authorities — has on financial markets. It is most often used when speaking of a change in security prices or market volatility that results directly from a piece of significant news or a public announcement. This potential for negative outcomes is known as headline risk.

It also could refer to how the market would react upon hearing the news that a change will occur at some point in the future. The announcement effect may also go by the terms "headline effect" or "media effect."

The announcement effect refers to the influence that company headlines, news stories, and social media play in influencing investor behavior.
Stock prices can quickly move up or down upon release of a positive or negative story, respectively, presenting investors with headline risk and providing day traders opportunities to make short-term profits.
Government-issued announcements, economic data releases, or guidance from the Fed can also move broader markets and investor sentiment.

Understanding the Announcement Effect

The announcement effect assumes that the behavior of systems (such as financial markets) or people (such as individual investors) can change merely by announcing a future policy change or divulging a newsworthy item. The news may come in the form of a press release or report.

Topics that can spur investor reaction, either positively or negatively, are things like company mergers and acquisitions (M&A); growth in money supply, inflation, and trade figures; changes in monetary policy, such as a hike or cut in a key interest rate; or developments that affect trading, like a stock split or change in dividend policy.

For example, if a company announces an acquisition, then its stock price may rise. Alternatively, if the government says that the gasoline tax will increase in six months, then commuters who drive to work every day might look for other modes of transportation, or spend less money now in anticipation of the greater expense going forward.

News released by central banks can have an especially dynamic and complicated effect on financial systems. Information about monetary policy or real factors, like productivity, can hugely affect the markets for goods, equity, housing, credit, and foreign exchange. Even neutral news about monetary policy can induce cyclic or boom-and-bust responses. Moreover, central bank announcements can induce rather than reduce volatility.

The Announcement Effect and the Federal Reserve System

An announcement from the Federal Reserve ("the Fed") about a change in interest rates generally correlates directly to stock prices and trading activity. For example, if the Fed raises interest rates, then stock prices are liable to fall. Prior to 1994, monetary policy objectives for the federal funds rate — any outcome of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting — were strictly confidential.

At its February 1994 meeting, the FOMC decided to modify the federal funds rate target, which it had not done for two years. To ensure that this important policy decision was communicated clearly to the markets, the FOMC decided to disclose it via public announcement. Thus began the custom of "Fed days” — when the FMOC makes announcements about interest rates — which now is shared by numerous central banks.

A practical outcome of sharing the decisions made at FOMC meetings is a kind of announcement effect — which, in this case, means that because the market knows what to expect from the Fed — the behavior of market rates can adjust accordingly with little or no immediate action by the trading desk.

In general, traders eagerly await announcements that come from the Federal Reserve. On Fed days, trading volume is notably higher; and on the day preceding a Fed day, trading is usually relatively calm.

Good News, Bad News, and Market Surprises

Economists, technical analysts, traders, and researchers spend a great deal of time trying to predict the effect of news or public announcements on stock prices in order to discern, among other investing strategies, the wisdom of switching between asset classes or moving in and out of the market altogether.

Although investment professionals often disagree on the finer points of technical theory, they do agree that the stock market is driven by news. Researchers have suggested that bad news has a larger impact on markets than good news, and that good news does not lift the market as much as bad news depresses it. Also, bad news during a bear market has a bigger negative impact than bad news during a bull market, and negative surprises often have a greater impact than positive surprises.

Whether negative or positive, the announcement effect always carries the potential to cause drastic changes in stock prices or other market values, especially if the news is a surprise. For a taste of just how volatile a reaction the markets can have to unexpected commentary, take a look at the graphic below. It shows that the dollar swung wildly between gains and losses on July 19, 2018, after President Donald Trump publicly criticized the Federal Reserve for raising interest rates — a comment that broke with the long tradition that United States presidents do not interfere with the business of the Fed.

Minimizing the Effect of Announcements

Dollar Volatility July 19, 2018

In order to minimize surprises and defend against radical reactions like the one pictured above, companies and governments often selectively leak, or hint at, announcements before they actually occur. Leaking critical news can allow the market to find equilibrium, or to “discount the stock” — that is, to incorporate the unexpected news into the price of a stock.

For instance, if a company's earnings are especially greater than usual one quarter, it might choose to leak the information to help ease the pressure for an unsustainable price spike at the time of the official earnings release. Likewise, on its Fed days, the Federal Reserve discloses what policy changes it might make before it actually makes them, so that the market can adjust smoothly to the new information.

Related terms:

Bear Market : Phases & Examples

A bear market occurs when prices in the market fall by 20% or more. read more

Boom And Bust Cycle

The boom and bust cycle describes capitalist economies that tend to contract after a period of expansion and then expand again. read more

Bull Market : Characteristics & Examples

A bull market is a financial market in which prices are rising or are expected to rise. read more

Central Bank

A central bank conducts a nation's monetary policy and oversees its money supply. read more

Discounting Mechanism

Discounting mechanism is the premise that the stock market takes into account all available information including present and potential future events. read more

Federal Funds Rate

The federal funds rate is the target interest rate set by the Fed at which commercial banks borrow and lend their excess reserves to each other overnight. read more

Federal Reserve System (FRS)

The Federal Reserve System is the central bank of the United States and provides the nation with a safe, flexible, and stable financial system. read more

Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is the branch of the Federal Reserve System that determines the direction of monetary policy. read more

Headline Risk

Headline risk is the possibility that a news story will adversely affect the price of an investment, such as a stock or commodity. read more

Headline Effect

The headline effect is the effect that negative news in the popular press has on a corporation or an economy.  read more