financial media
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2021 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 254-261
Author(s):  
Huixin Pei

With the continuous development of traditional media in China, talents in the media industry continue to emerge, and the continuous updating and upgrading of media accelerate the rapid integration of media carriers, making the birth of " Fusion Media”. With the rapid update and iteration of financial media, it can be widely disseminated and applied. While the traditional media industry is impacted by financial media, it also faces new challenges and opportunities. Therefore, in the rapid development of the media industry, traditional media needs to innovate the old communication mode and content. Broadcasting and hosting professionals as the link and bridge between the masses and the media, such changes also put forward more stringent requirements on the professional ability of broadcasting and hosting professionals, and the form and content of the work has become more diversified. Hence, in order to cope with the advent of the fusion media era, it is also important to improve one's professionalism and practical skills. How can these competencies be further enhanced to meet the needs of today's media industry and the public, and what are some examples of successful transformations in the media industry? To address these questions, this paper first analyses the changes in the broadcasting industry in the context of media convergence, and then further explores the competencies that broadcasting professionals need to possess in the era of "Fusion Media". Recommendations are also provided correspondingly in the last section of this paper as well.


Author(s):  
Eitan Goldman ◽  
Jordan Martel ◽  
Jan Schneemeier
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 251 ◽  
pp. 03067
Author(s):  
Jingwei Piao ◽  
Yancong Su

The paper explores the role of elite financial media in construction narratives of global interconnectivity, in a comparative framework[7]. The existing era of globalization provided us with new challenges for strategic intelligence as the virtual compression of time along with new technological achievements in shorter period of time and potentially cataclysmic threats[8]. Two globally circulated financial journals—Caijing, China’s leading financial news organization, and the Economist, with a vital influence across the globe—are chosen to manifest the diverse media discourses representing, respectively, the Chinese and Anglo-American socio- economic backgrounds. The paper aims to use the quantitative content analysis to answer the question: what are the narrative characteristics of the Caijing and the Economist in portraying China’s economic globalisation? The study are designed to tackle a specific focus on the globalised elite communication, in order to guide the investigation of China’s global interconnectivity in a hybridizing and contesting way[4]. Like other forms of mediated electronic connectivity, the Internet instead of circumscribing sovereignty has offered centralised authority new ways of conducting statecraft, by circulating ideas that represents the consensus shared by global elites.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias M M Buehlmaier ◽  
Josef Zechner

Abstract Using merger announcements and applying methods from computational linguistics we find strong evidence that stock prices underreact to information in financial media. A one standard deviation increase in the media-implied probability of merger completion increases the subsequent 12-day return of a long-short merger strategy by 1.2 percentage points. Filtering out the 28% of announced deals with the lowest media-implied completion probability increases the annualized alpha from merger arbitrage by 9.3 percentage points. Our results are particularly pronounced when high-yield spreads are large and on days when only few merger deals are announced.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nannan Xu

Today, in the 1920s of the 21st century, financial media has spread all over people's daily life, profoundly changing people's lifestyle and behavior habits. As one of the organizations of news communication institutions, the Propaganda department of colleges and universities is also facing the challenge of readjusting the development path.


Author(s):  
Diane L Cormany

Abstract After retiring from The Suze Orman Show, Suze Orman remained highly visible across media. Recently, she returned with her revised bestseller Women and Money (2018a) and a weekly podcast timed to coincide with #metoo. Across media, Orman has utilized the affect associated with feminine media genres, including self-help and makeover shows, to promote a lifestyle based on proper financial self-management. Her advice to women about marriage, motherhood, and filial duty makes it clear that such discipline is particularly gendered. Orman both uses and chafes against feminist discourses to frame finance as another problem to be managed for women. I understand Orman’s advice as affective through her use of fear, shame, and pride to promote individualized financialization at the expense of interpersonal relationships. My unique approach brings affect theory to financial media through analysis of Orman’s media texts.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 28
Author(s):  
Miao Jiang

<p>In China's incomplete stock market which mainly consists of retail games and short-term operations, both of the high stock turnover rate and P/E ratios reflect excessive noise trading. This article focuses on the characteristic that individual investors are susceptible to financial media information, combined with the development and characteristics of financial media. From the perspective of behavioral finance, this paper analyzes the impact of financial media on noise trading. Using behavioral finance and psychology-related knowledge, investor behavior can be better understood, so as the motivation behind noise trading. Finally, in order to promote the healthy development of the stock market, this paper makes recommendations to improve the efficiency of the capital market.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Knowles ◽  
Steve Schifferes

Since the Global Financial Crisis of 2008 the financial media has been analysed from the perspectives of experts and far less from the audiences who consume it. This article fills this gap by exploring public consumption of financial news and their levels of satisfaction. It explores another, less researched, issue; that of financial literacy, which is a major impediment to public understanding and is weaker among women, young people and the less affluent. Consequently, the study makes the following suggestions: financial journalism needs to respond to a wide audience and provide more useful, unbiased and accessible financial news; personal finance news, which is an under-researched genre, could build financial capability levels and might improve trust between media and its audiences; and the financial media should be considered a key player by policy-makers if they want to bolster financial capability.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lin Hu ◽  
Kun Li ◽  
Phong T. H. Ngo ◽  
Denis Sosyura
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 80 ◽  
pp. 121-129
Author(s):  
Bo Yang ◽  
Ji Sun ◽  
Jie (Michael) Guo ◽  
Jiayi Fu

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