The semi-arbitrary need to match stock market moves with reasons
March 2, 2012
Posted by Chris Roush
Matthew Yglesias, the Slate business and economics correspondent, writes about how business journalists scramble to find reasons for why markets move.
Yglesias writes, “One of my absolutely favorite things about financial journalism is the need to semi-arbitrarily match news events to market fluctuations. The way this works is that every day equity markets are either up or down or flat, and whatever happens it’s newsworthy. Meanwhile, a bunch of stuff happens. Journalists and headline writers are thus put under great strain to assign some kind of connection between news events and market fluctuations even though everyone knows that there’s a fair amount of random fluctuation in day-to-day equity pricing. Since these are highly trained professionals doing the causal attribution, they usually manage to come up with something that at least sounds plausible. Like if there’s a jobs report and shares go up, we’ll either hear that shares went up because the jobs report was strong or else that shares went up because the weak jobs report has boosted expectations of monetary stimulus.
“Sometimes, though, you get something like the above which I can’t even parse at all.”
OLD Media Moves
The semi-arbitrary need to match stock market moves with reasons
March 2, 2012
Posted by Chris Roush
Matthew Yglesias, the Slate business and economics correspondent, writes about how business journalists scramble to find reasons for why markets move.
Yglesias writes, “One of my absolutely favorite things about financial journalism is the need to semi-arbitrarily match news events to market fluctuations. The way this works is that every day equity markets are either up or down or flat, and whatever happens it’s newsworthy. Meanwhile, a bunch of stuff happens. Journalists and headline writers are thus put under great strain to assign some kind of connection between news events and market fluctuations even though everyone knows that there’s a fair amount of random fluctuation in day-to-day equity pricing. Since these are highly trained professionals doing the causal attribution, they usually manage to come up with something that at least sounds plausible. Like if there’s a jobs report and shares go up, we’ll either hear that shares went up because the jobs report was strong or else that shares went up because the weak jobs report has boosted expectations of monetary stimulus.
“Sometimes, though, you get something like the above which I can’t even parse at all.”
Read more here.
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