世界股票市场和亚洲经济危机的传染

R. Bowman, K. F. Chan, Matthew R. Comer
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引用次数: 8

摘要

越来越多的证据表明,经济危机会在各个经济体和股票市场之间传播。这引发了两个问题。首先,在极端情况下(“传染”),一国股市反应的方向和幅度能否用经济基本面来解释?第二,在股市普遍蔓延之际,国际多元化是否有好处?我们考察了世界主要股票市场对1997年亚洲金融危机的反应。特别是,我们研究了世界股票市场之间的相互关系,解释各国对这场危机反应的不同方向和程度的因素,以及金融危机期间全球投资组合多样化的有效性。我们的分析提供的证据与亚洲金融危机期间世界股票市场之间的相关性急剧增加相一致。然而,这种影响集中在危机前后的短时间内。国际多样化的好处可能是可以获得的,即使这一时期包含一个全球性的金融危机。我们表明,生产率和利率宏观经济变量,全球贝塔和衍生品交易的存在在解释亚洲金融危机期间的股票市场回报是重要的。全球贝塔变量的影响尤其强烈。最后,贸易变量不显著,其影响被纳入利率和通货膨胀宏观经济变量。总的来说,我们认为我们的研究结果支持了经济危机向其他市场蔓延的理性观点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Contagion in the World Equity Markets and the Asian Economic Crisis
There is growing evidence that economic crises are transmitted across economies and equity markets. This motivates two questions. First, can the direction and magnitude of a country's stock market reaction during an extreme case ("contagion") be explained by economic fundamentals? Second, are there benefits of international diversification during times of widespread contagion among equity markets? We examine the reaction of major world equity markets to the 1997 Asian Crisis. In particular, we investigate the interrelationships among world equity markets, the factors explaining the different directions and magnitudes of countries' reactions to this crisis and the effectiveness of the global diversification of investment portfolios during financial crises. Our analyses provide evidence that is consistent with the correlations among world equity markets increasing dramatically during the period of the Asian Crisis. However, this effect is concentrated on a short period around the crisis. The benefits of international diversification may be obtainable, even when the period contains a worldwide financial crisis. We show that the productivity and interest rate macroeconomic variables, worldwide beta and the existence of derivatives trading are important in explaining the stock market returns during the Asian Crisis. The effect of the worldwide beta variable is particularly strong. Finally, the trade variables are insignificant, their influences being subsumed by interest rate and inflation macroeconomic variables. On balance, we interpret our results as supporting a rational view of the spread of an economic crisis to other markets.
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