Journal article

Quantitative Easing and Tapering Uncertainty: Evidence from Twitter


Authors listMeinusch, Annette; Tillmann, Peter

Publication year2017

Pages227-258

JournalInternational Journal of Central Banking

Volume number13

Issue number4

ISSN1815-4654

eISSN1815-7556

PublisherEuropean Central Bank


Abstract
In this paper we analyze the extent to which people's changing beliefs about the timing of the exit from quantitative easing ("tapering") affect asset prices. To quantify beliefs of market participants, we use data from Twitter, the social media application. Our data set covers the entire Twitter volume on Federal Reserve tapering in 2013. Based on the time series of beliefs about an early or late tapering, we estimate a structural VAR-X model under appropriate sign restrictions on the impulse responses to identify a belief shock. The results show that shocks to tapering beliefs have non-negligible effects on interest rates and exchange rates. We also derive measures of monetary policy uncertainty and disagreement of beliefs, respectively, and estimate their impact. The paper is one of the first to use social media data for analyzing monetary policy and also adds to the rapidly growing literature on macroeconomic uncertainty shocks.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleMeinusch, A. and Tillmann, P. (2017) Quantitative Easing and Tapering Uncertainty: Evidence from Twitter, International Journal of Central Banking, 13(4), pp. 227-258

APA Citation styleMeinusch, A., & Tillmann, P. (2017). Quantitative Easing and Tapering Uncertainty: Evidence from Twitter. International Journal of Central Banking. 13(4), 227-258.



Keywords


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