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The effects from the United States and Japan to emerging stock markets in Asia and Vietnam
Author(s) -
Nguyen Thi Ngan,
Nguyen Thi Hien,
Hoang Trung Nghia
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science and technology development journal - economics - law and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2588-1051
DOI - 10.32508/stdjelm.v3i4.586
Subject(s) - spillover effect , emerging markets , stock (firearms) , vietnamese , volatility (finance) , equity (law) , china , economics , stock market , monetary economics , business , financial economics , international economics , geography , finance , linguistics , philosophy , context (archaeology) , archaeology , political science , law , microeconomics
The subprime mortgage crisis in the United States (U.S.) in mid-2008 suggests that stock prices volatility do spillover from one market to another after international stock markets downturn. The purpose of this paper is to examine the magnitude of return and volatility spillovers from developed markets (the U.S. and Japan) to eight emerging equity markets (India, China, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand) and Vietnam. Employing a mean and volatility spillover model that deals with the U.S. and Japan shocks and day effects as exogenous variables in ARMA(1,1), GARCH(1,1) for Asian emerging markets, the study finds some interesting findings. Firstly, the day effect is present on six out of nine studied markets, except for the Indian, Taiwanese and Philippine. Secondly, the results of return spillover confirm significant spillover effects across the markets with different magnitudes. Specifically, the U.S. exerts a stronger influence on the Malaysian, Philippine and Vietnamese market compared with Japan. In contrast, Japan has a higher spillover effect on the Chinese, Indian, Korea, and Thailand than the U.S. For the Indonesian market, the return effect is equal. Finally, there is no evidence of a volatility effect of the U.S. and Japanese markets on the Asian emerging markets in this study.

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