Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Economics and Business Administration, University of Craiova, Craiova, Romania
2. National Institute of Securities Markets, Maharashtra, India
3. Faculty of Education Science, Law and Public Administration, Constantin Brancusi University of Targu Jiu, Targu Jiu, Romania
Abstract
The main aim of this paper is to investigate volatility spillover effects, the impact of past volatility on present market movements,
the reaction to positive and negative news, among selected financial markets. The sample stock markets are geographically dispersed on different continents,
respectively North America, Europe and Asia. We also investigate whether selected emerging stock markets capture the volatility patterns of developed stock
markets located in the same region. The empirical analysis is focused on seven developed stock market indices, i.e. IBEX35 (Spain), DJIA (USA), FTSE100 (UK),
TSX Composite (Canada), NIKKEI225 (Japan), DAX (Germany), CAC40 (France) and five emerging stock market indices, i.e. BET (Romania), WIG20 (Poland), BSE (India),
SSE Composite (China) and BUX (Hungary) from January 2000 to June 2018. The econometric framework includes symmetric and asymmetric GARCH models i.e. EGARCH
and GJR which are performed in order to capture asymmetric volatility clustering, interdependence, correlations, financial integration and leptokurtosis.
Symmetric and asymmetric GARCH models revealed that all selected financial markets are highly volatile, including the presence of leverage effect. The stock
markets in Hungary, USA, Germany, India and Canada exhibit high positive volatility after global financial crisis.
Publisher
Vilnius Gediminas Technical University
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)
Cited by
30 articles.
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