Effects of feedback on probabilistic forecasts of stock prices

Date

1995

Authors

Önkal D.
Muradoğlu, G.

Editor(s)

Advisor

Supervisor

Co-Advisor

Co-Supervisor

Instructor

Source Title

International Journal of Forecasting

Print ISSN

0169-2070

Electronic ISSN

1872-8200

Publisher

Volume

11

Issue

2

Pages

307 - 319

Language

English

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Series

Abstract

This paper reports the results of an experiment in stock-price forecasting that investigated the effects of feedback on various dimensions of probability forecasting accuracy. Three types of feedback were used: (1) simple outcome feedback, (2) outcome feedback presented in the task format, and (3) performance feedback in the form of an overall accuracy score in addition to detailed calibration information. While calibration improved for all the feedback groups, forecasters' skill was found to improve only for the task-formated outcome feedback and performance feedback groups (but not for the simple outcome feedback group). Finally, the forecasters in the performance feedback group also improved their mean slope and mean probability scores, an effect not observed in the other feedback groups. It is suggested that, in a dynamic environment like the stock market, probability forecasting offers distinct advantages by providing an important channel of communication between the forecasters and the users of financial information.

Course

Other identifiers

Book Title

Citation