Search results for "Contagion"

showing 10 items of 56 documents

Spillovers through banking centers: a panel data analysis of bank flows

2003

Abstract This paper presents evidence that spillovers through bank lending contributed to the transmission of currency crises during the recent episodes of financial instability in emerging markets. The innovation of the paper is that it looks beyond aggregated measures of contagion into the structure of bank flows, disaggregating by banking centers. The main findings are that spillovers caused by banks’ exposures to a crisis country help predict flows in third countries after the Mexican and Asian crises, but not after the Russian crisis. In the latter, there is evidence of a generalized outflow from emerging markets. The importance of spillovers through banking centers suggests that count…

Economics and EconometricsFinancial contagionHG FinanceContagion riskCurrencyCreditorEconomicsFinancial systemEmerging marketsCurrency crisisFinanceFinancial instabilityPanel data
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Forecasting Financial Crises and Contagion in Asia using Dynamic Factor Analysis

2009

Abstract In this paper we use principal components analysis to obtain vulnerability indicators able to predict financial turmoil. Probit modelling through principal components and also stochastic simulation of a Dynamic Factor model are used to produce the corresponding probability forecasts regarding the currency crisis events affecting a number of East Asian countries during the 1997–1998 period. The principal components model improves upon a number of competing models, in terms of out-of-sample forecasting performance.

Economics and EconometricsFinancial contagionforecasting; dynamic factor; currency crisesFinancial contagionFinancial economicsVulnerabilityforecastingProbitFinancial Contagion Dynamic Factor Model Stochastic SimulationFinancial Contagion Dynamic Factor ModelStochastic simulationEconomicsEast AsiaFinancebusiness.industryjel:C51jel:C32Dynamic Factor modelCurrency crisisjel:F34currency crisesDynamic factorPrincipal component analysisbusinessFinancedynamic factor
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Fatal attraction: Using distance to measure contagion in good times as well as bad

2007

This paper proposes a new measure of contagion that is good at anticipating future vulnerabilities. Building on previous work, it uses correlations of equity markets across countries to measure contagion, but in a departure from previous practice measures contagion using the relationship of these correlations with distance. Also in contrast to previous work, our test is good at identifying periods of “positive contagion,” in which capital flows to emerging markets in a herd-like manner largely unrelated to fundamentals. Identifying such periods of “fatal attraction” is important as they provide the essential ingredients for subsequent crises and rapid outflows of capital.

Economics and EconometricsFinancial economicsEquity (finance)EconomicsContagion Capital inflows Emerging market crisesCapital flowsFatal attractionEmerging marketsFinance
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TESTING FOR CONTAGION: A CONDITIONAL CORRELATION ANALYSIS

2005

Abstract In this paper, we test for contagion within the East Asian region, contagion being defined as a significant increase in the degree of comovement between stock returns in different countries. For this purpose, we use a parameter stability test, and, following [Rigobon, R., 2003a. On the measurement of the international propagation of shocks: is the transmission stable?, Journal of International Economics], we control for three types of bias, resulting from heteroscedasticity, endogeneity and omitted variable, respectively. The null of interdependence against the alternative of contagion is then tested as an overidentifying restriction. Unlike other studies, our approach is based on …

Economics and EconometricsHeteroscedasticityContagionStability testFinancial economicsConditional correlationAsset marketOmitted-variable biascontagion; identification; heteroscedasticityheteroscedasticityEast asian regioncontagionCorrelation analysisEconometricsEconomicsjel:F3Contagion Financial Crises Conditional Correlationidentificationjel:F4EndogeneityFinancial criseFinanceStock (geology)
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Volatility co-movements: a time-scale decomposition analysis

2015

In this paper, we are interested in detecting contagion from US to European stock market volatilities in the period immediately after the Lehman Brothers collapse. The analysis is based on a factor decomposition of the covariance matrix, in the time and frequency domain, using wavelets. The analysis aims to disentangle two components of volatility contagion (anticipated and unanticipated by the market). Once we focus on standardized factor loadings, the results show no evidence of contagion (from the US) in market expectations (coming from implied volatility) and evidence of unanticipated contagion (coming from the volatility risk premium) for almost any European country. Finally, the estim…

Economics and EconometricsVariance swapStochastic volatilityFinancial economicsSettore SECS-P/05 - Econometriaheteroskedasticity biasImplied volatilityVolatility risk premiumwaveletsrealized volatilityvolatility risk premiumcontagionVolatility swapImplied volatility Realized volatility Volatility risk premium Contagion Heteroskedasticity bias WaveletsVolatility smileForward volatilityEconometricsEconomicsimplied volatility; realized volatility; volatility risk premium; contagion; heteroskedasticity bias; wavelets.Volatility (finance)Financeimplied volatility
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Emerging Market Contagion Under Geopolitical Uncertainty

2019

We find that 10 emerging stock markets have high risk of contagion on the regional level but lower spillover with respect to the global markets, implying a potential for diversification benefits between emerging and global markets. Regional market integration seems to have been caused by trade integration, which has a policy implication for trade agreements’ systemic risk effects. We find that the geopolitical risk has no impact on either the return, or volatility spillovers. However, the general stock market risk (VIX) is connected to individual market volatilities, while the oil market is largely receiving the spillovers from the other markets. peerReviewed

Emerging stock markets050208 financespilloverkansainväliset markkinatarvopaperimarkkinat05 social sciencesDiversification (finance)International economicstaloudelliset kriisitGeopoliticsequity marketkehittyvät markkinatSpillover effectcontagionfinanssikriisitpoliittinen epävakaisuus0502 economics and businessEconomics050207 economicsEmerging marketsGeneral Economics Econometrics and Financehealth care economics and organizationsFinanceEmerging Markets Finance and Trade
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Testing for financial contagion between developed and emerging markets during the 1997 East Asian crisis

2005

In this paper we examine whether during the 1997 East Asian crisis there was any contagion from the four largest economies in the region (Thailand, Indonesia, Korea and Malaysia) to a number of developed countries (Japan, UK, Germany and France). Following Forbes and Rigobon, we test for contagion as a significant positive shift in the correlation between asset returns, taking into account heteroscedasticity and endogeneity bias. Furthermore, we improve on earlier empirical studies by carrying out a full sample test of the stability of the system that relies on more plausible (over) identifying restrictions. The estimation results provide some evidence of contagion, in particular from Japan…

EstimationEconomics and EconometricsHeteroscedasticityFinancial contagionContagionfinancial criseMonetary economicsmultivariate garchEmpirical researchcontagionconditional correlationAccountingEconomicsidentificationEast AsiaEndogeneityEmerging marketsDeveloped countrycontagion; multivariate garch; identificationFinance
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What makes music emotionally significant? Exploring the underlying mechanisms

2013

A common approach to study emotional reactions to music is to attempt to obtain direct links between musical surface features such as tempo and a listener’s response. However, such an analysis ultimately fails to explain why emotions are aroused in the listener. In this article, we propose an alternative approach, which seeks to explain musical emotions in terms of a set of underlying mechanisms that are activated by different types of information in musical events. We illustrate this approach by reporting a listening experiment, which manipulated a piece of music to activate four mechanisms: brain stem reflex; emotional contagion; episodic memory; and musical expectancy. The musical excer…

Expectancy theoryFacial expressionMusic and emotionta6131Active listeningEmotional contagionPsychology (miscellaneous)MusicalSet (psychology)PsychologyEpisodic memoryMusicCognitive psychologyPsychology of Music
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Forecasting Financial Crises and Contagion in Asia Using Dynamic Factor Analysis

2009

In this paper we use principal components analysis to obtain vulnerability indicators able to predict financial turmoil. Probit modelling through principal components and also stochastic simulation of a Dynamic Factor model are used to produce the corresponding probability forecasts regarding the currency crisis events affecting a number of East Asian countries during the 1997-1998 period. The principal components model improves upon a number of competing models, in terms of out-of-sample forecasting performance.

FinanceFinancial contagionbusiness.industryDynamic factorStochastic simulationPrincipal component analysisEconomicsVulnerabilityProbitEast AsiabusinessCurrency crisisSSRN Electronic Journal
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‘Too interconnected to fail’ financial network of US CDS market: Topological fragility and systemic risk

2012

A small segment of credit default swaps (CDS) on residential mortgage backed securities (RMBS) stand implicated in the 2007 financial crisis. The dominance of a few big players in the chains of insurance and reinsurance for CDS credit risk mitigation for banks' assets has led to the idea of too interconnected to fail (TITF) resulting, as in the case of AIG, of a tax payer bailout. We provide an empirical reconstruction of the US CDS network based on the FDIC Call Reports for off balance sheet bank data for the 4th quarter in 2007 and 2008. The propagation of financial contagion in networks with dense clustering which reflects high concentration or localization of exposures between few parti…

FinanceOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementEconomics and EconometricsFinancial contagionCredit default swapFinancial contagionbusiness.industryFinancial networksFinancial marketFinancial systemFinancial networksEigenvector centralityCredit default swapsSystemic riskEconomicsSystemic riskFinancial contagion systemic riskBank failurebusinessSuper-spreader taxBailoutCredit riskJournal of Economic Behavior & Organization
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