Did Baltic stock markets offer diversification benefits during the recent financial turmoil? Novel evidence from a nonparametric causality-in-quantiles test

被引:3
|
作者
Babalos, Vassilios [1 ,2 ]
Balcilar, Mehmet [3 ,4 ,5 ]
Loate, Tumisang B. [4 ]
Chisoro, Shingie [4 ]
机构
[1] Technol Educ Inst Peloponnese, Dept Accounting & Finance, Antikalamos 24100, Greece
[2] Univ Piraeus, Dept Banking & Financial Management, Piraeus, Greece
[3] Eastern Mediterranean Univ, Dept Econ, ViaMersin 10, Famagusta, Northern Cyprus, Turkey
[4] Univ Pretoria, Dept Econ, ZA-0002 Pretoria, South Africa
[5] IPAG Business Sch, Paris, France
关键词
Baltic stock markets; Non parametric; Quantile causality; Diversification benefits; Global financial crisis; INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO DIVERSIFICATION; TIME-SERIES REGRESSION; EMERGING MARKETS; EQUITY MARKETS; INTEGRATION; COINTEGRATION; CRISIS; GAINS;
D O I
10.1007/s10663-016-9344-4
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Motivated by financial liberalization investors seek for new investment opportunities through international portfolio diversification. To this end we explore any asymmetric causal relationship between developed European stock markets (Germany, France and UK) and emerging Baltic markets namely; Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Our analysis focuses on the period before and after countries' EU accession and pre- and post the global financial crisis. For this purpose, both the standard parametric test for causality and a novel nonparametric test for causality-in-quantiles are employed. The results of both the parametric and nonparametric Granger causality test support a causal relationship in mean that runs from all of the major markets to the Baltic markets across both samples. The results imply the existence of significant nonlinear return and volatility spillover from European markets to Baltic markets. Policy implications for international investors are also discussed.
引用
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页码:29 / 47
页数:19
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