Changes in Stock Market Co-movements between Contracting Parties after the Trade Agreement and Their Implications

被引:1
|
作者
Ahn, So-Young [1 ]
Bae, Yeon-Ho [2 ]
机构
[1] Gyeongsang Natl Univ, Dept Int Trade, Jinju, South Korea
[2] Daegu Univ, Business Sch, Gyongsan, South Korea
来源
JOURNAL OF KOREA TRADE | 2023年 / 27卷 / 01期
关键词
DCC-GARCH Model; Stock Market Co-movements; Trade Agreements; Trade Intensity; United States; VOLATILITY; CONTAGION; TRANSMISSION; INTEGRATION; LINKAGES; US;
D O I
10.35611/jkt.2023.27.1.139
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Purpose - The study of co-movements between stock markets is a crucial area of finance and has recently received much interest in a variety of studies, especially in international finance. Stock market co-movements are a major phenomenon in financial markets, but they are not necessarily independent of the real market. Several studies support the idea that bilateral trade linkages significantly impact stock market correlations. Motivated by this perspective, this study investigates whether real market integration due to trade agreements brings about financial market integration in terms of stock market co-movement. Design/methodology - Over the 10 free trade agreements (FTAs) signed by the United States, using a dynamic conditional correlations (DCC) multivariate GARCH (MGRACH) model, we empirically measure the degree of integration by finding DCCs between the US market and the partner country's market. We then track how these correlations evolve over time and compare the results before and after trade agreements. Findings - According to the empirical results, there are positive return spillover effects from the US market to eight counterpart equity markets, except Jordan, Morocco, and Singapore. Especially Mexico, Canada, and Chile have large return spillover effects at the 1% significance level. All partner countries of FTAs generally have positive correlations with the US over the entire period, but the size and variance are somewhat different by country. Meanwhile, not all countries that signed trade agreements with the United States showed the same pattern of stock market co-movement after the agreement. Korea, Mexico, Chile, Colombia, Peru, and Singapore show increasing DCC patterns after trade agreements with the US. However, Canada, Australia, Bahrain, Jordan, and Morocco do not show different patterns before and after trade agreements in DCCs. These countries generally have the characteristic of relatively lower or higher co-movements in stock markets with the US before the signing of the FTAs. Originality/value - To our knowledge, few studies have directly examined the linkages between trade agreements and stock markets. Our approach is novel as it considers the problem of conditional heteroscedasticity and visualizes the change of correlations with time variations. Moreover, analyzing several trade agreements based on the United States enables the results of cross-country pairs to be compared. Hence, this study provides information on the degree of stock market integration with countries with which the United States has trade agreements, while simultaneously allowing us to track whether there have been changes in stock market integration patterns before and after trade agreements.
引用
收藏
页码:139 / 158
页数:20
相关论文
共 47 条