Dynamic Stock Dependence and Monetary Variables in the United States (2000-2016): A Copula and Neural Network Approach

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Abstract

This paper investigates dynamic dependence between the American Stock Market (S&P 500) and the World Share Market (MSCIW) and examines whether key monetary variables (short and long-term interest rates, interest rate spreads, and exchange rate) explain changes in this relation, during the period January 2000 - June 2016. The methodology includes a Dynamic Copula approach and a Multilayer Perceptron Network. Results suggest that there is interdependence between the American and global stock market and that the dynamic dependence is mainly explained by the short-term interest rate spread, 3-month T-bill’s rate and 3-month London Interbank Offered Rate LIBOR rate.

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Sosa, M., Bucio, C., & Calisto, E. O. (2022). Dynamic Stock Dependence and Monetary Variables in the United States (2000-2016): A Copula and Neural Network Approach. Lecturas de Economia, (96), 201–234. https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.le.n96a345321

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