Asymmetric volatility spillover between hospitality sub-sectors during COVID-19: evidence from the USA

Author:

Marobhe Mutaju IsaackORCID,Kansheba Jonathan Mukiza Peter

Abstract

PurposeThis article examines dynamic volatility spillovers between stock index returns of four main hospitality sub-sectors in US during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. These are tourism and travel, hotel and lodging, recreational services and food and beverages. Volatility spillovers are explicitly used as accurate and informative proxies for risk contagion between sectors during turbulent times.Design/methodology/approachThe authors employ dynamic conditional correlation-generalized autoregression heteroskedasticity (DCC-GARCH) and wavelet coherence analysis (WCA) to analyze the phenomenon. The authors’ timeframe is divided into three main sub-periods, namely the pre-pandemic, the first wave and the second wave periods.FindingsThis study’s results reveal immense negative shocks in returns of all four sub-sectors on the Black Monday (8th March 2020). Moreover, high volatility persistence was observed during both waves with an exception of tourism and travel which exhibited lower volatility persistence during the second wave. The authors discovered magnified contagion effects between tourism and travel, hotel and lodgment and recreational services during the first wave of the pandemic with tourism and travel being the main volatility transmitter. Lower magnitudes of spillovers were observed between food and beverages and other sub-sectors with a decoupling effect being evident during the second wave.Research limitations/implicationsThis study’s findings contribute to the contagion theory by providing evidence of disproportional volatility spillover among hospitality sub-sectors despite being exposed to similar turbulent economic conditions.Practical implicationsCrucial implications can be drawn from this study’s findings to assist in risk management, asset valuation and portfolio management. The importance of close monitoring, safety measures, international diversification and adequacy of liquid assets during health crises cannot be stresses enough for hospitality firms. Retail investors, speculators and asset managers can take advantage of this study’s findings to design trading strategies and hedge against risk.Originality/valueA body of knowledge pertaining to effects of crises such as COVID-19 on hospitality stocks has been proliferating. Nonetheless, there is still a relative dearth of empirical literature on volatility spillover between hospitality sub-sectors especially during periods of rising economic uncertainties.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management

Reference48 articles.

Cited by 5 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Asymmetric Return Connectedness Among Indian Equity Sectors: 
Insights from Recent Global 
Disruptions;Global Business Review;2024-06-02

2. Dynamics of Spillover among Sectors of Indian Stock Market before and during Covid-19;MUDRA: Journal of Finance and Accounting;2023-12-10

3. Determinants and COVID-19 effects on RevPAR: The case of Europe;European Journal of Tourism, Hospitality and Recreation;2023-11-18

4. Default risk transmission in the travel and leisure industry;International Journal of Hospitality Management;2023-08

5. Where do tourism tokens travel to and from?;Current Issues in Tourism;2023-07-27

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