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Emerging Stock Market Reactions to Shocks During Various Crisis Periods

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dc.contributor.author Bhowmik, Roni
dc.contributor.author Debnath, Gouranga Chandra
dc.contributor.author Debnath, Nitai Chandra
dc.contributor.author Wang, Shouyang
dc.date.accessioned 2023-09-24T06:37:21Z
dc.date.available 2023-09-24T06:37:21Z
dc.date.issued 22-09-13
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.daffodilvarsity.edu.bd:8080/handle/123456789/11112
dc.description.abstract This study investigates granger causal linkages among six Asian emerging stock markets and the US market over the period 2002–2020, taking into account several crisis periods. The pairwise Granger causality tests for investigating the short-run causality show significant bi- and uni-directional causal relationships in those markets and evidence that they have become more internationally integrated after every crisis period. An exception is Bangladesh with almost no significant short-term causal linkages with other markets. For understanding, how the financial linkages amplify volatility spillover effects, we apply the GARCH-M model and find that volatility and return spillovers act very inversely over time. However, market interface is weak before the crisis periods and becomes very strong during the financial crisis and US-China economic policy uncertainty periods. The US market plays a dominant role during the financial crisis and COVID-19 periods. Further analysis using the VAR model shows that a large proportion of the forecast variance of the Asian emerging stock markets is affected by the S&P 500 and that market shock starts to rise notably from the 1 to 10 period. The overall findings could provide important policy implications in the six countries under study regarding hedging, trading strategies, and financial market regulation. en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Daffodil International University en_US
dc.subject Stock markets en_US
dc.subject Market en_US
dc.subject Economic growth en_US
dc.title Emerging Stock Market Reactions to Shocks During Various Crisis Periods en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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