Do markets cointegrate after financial crises? Evidence from g-20 stock markets

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Abstract

The results of the single-equation cointegration tests indicate that patterns of cointegration in the two main and four sub-periods are not homogeneous. Two key findings emerge from the study. First, fewer stock markets cointegrated with S&P 500 during the crisis period than they did during the pre-crisis. In other words, as the 2008 financial crisis deepened, S&P 500 and G-20 stock indices moved towards less cointegration. The decreasing number of cointegrating relationships implies that the U.S. stock markets and other G-20 markets have experienced different driving forces since the start of the U.S. crisis. Second, among those markets that are cointegrated with S&P 500, they happened to be deeply affected by S&P and the shocks emerging from it. The 2007–2009 financial crises can be considered a structural break in the long-run relationship and may have resulted from effective joint intervention/responses taken by members of G-20 nations.

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APA

Haque, M., & Shamsub, H. (2015). Do markets cointegrate after financial crises? Evidence from g-20 stock markets. International Journal of Financial Studies, 3(4), 557–586. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs3040557

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