Words that Matter: The Impact of Negative Words on News Sentiment and Stock Market Index
Abstract
Analysis of negative word impact on sentiment scores in Korean economic news reveals enhanced correlation with stock market performance when using an expanded lexicon containing crisis-related negative terms.
This study investigates the impact of negative words on sentiment analysis and its effect on the South Korean stock market index, KOSPI200. The research analyzes a dataset of 45,723 South Korean daily economic news articles using Word2Vec, cosine similarity, and an expanded lexicon. The findings suggest that incorporating negative words significantly increases sentiment scores' negativity in news titles, which can affect the stock market index. The study reveals that an augmented sentiment lexicon (Sent1000), including the top 1,000 negative words with high cosine similarity to 'Crisis,' more effectively captures the impact of news sentiment on the stock market index than the original sentiment lexicon (Sent0). The results underscore the importance of considering negative nuances and context when analyzing news content and its potential impact on market dynamics and public opinion.
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