STLGTRAug 11, 2022

New drugs and stock market: how to predict pharma market reaction to clinical trial announcements

arXiv:2208.07248v21 citationsh-index: 18
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of financial risk management for investors and pharmaceutical companies by providing a predictive framework, though it is incremental as it builds on existing methods like BERT and Temporal Fusion Transformers.

The paper tackled predicting stock price changes of pharmaceutical companies following clinical trial announcements, achieving this by integrating sentiment analysis, temporal forecasting, graph networks, and gradient boosting on a dataset of 5436 announcements from 681 companies over five years.

Pharmaceutical companies operate in a strictly regulated and highly risky environment in which a single slip can lead to serious financial implications. Accordingly, the announcements of clinical trial results tend to determine the future course of events, hence being closely monitored by the public. In this work, we provide statistical evidence for the result promulgation influence on the public pharma market value. Whereas most works focus on retrospective impact analysis, the present research aims to predict the numerical values of announcement-induced changes in stock prices. For this purpose, we develop a pipeline that includes a BERT-based model for extracting sentiment polarity of announcements, a Temporal Fusion Transformer for forecasting the expected return, a graph convolution network for capturing event relationships, and gradient boosting for predicting the price change. The challenge of the problem lies in inherently different patterns of responses to positive and negative announcements, reflected in a stronger and more pronounced reaction to the negative news. Moreover, such phenomenon as the drop in stocks after the positive announcements affirms the counterintuitiveness of the price behavior. Importantly, we discover two crucial factors that should be considered while working within a predictive framework. The first factor is the drug portfolio size of the company, indicating the greater susceptibility to an announcement in the case of small drug diversification. The second one is the network effect of the events related to the same company or nosology. All findings and insights are gained on the basis of one of the biggest FDA (the Food and Drug Administration) announcement datasets, consisting of 5436 clinical trial announcements from 681 companies over the last five years.

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