Financial Innovation (Sep 2024)

Does the U.S. extreme indicator matter in stock markets? International evidence

  • Xiaozhen Jing,
  • Dezhong Xu,
  • Bin Li,
  • Tarlok Singh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40854-024-00610-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 27

Abstract

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Abstract We propose a new predictor—the innovation in the daily return minimum in the U.S. stock market ( $$\Delta {MIN}^{US}$$ Δ MIN US )—for predicting international stock market returns. Using monthly data for a wide range of 17 MSCI international stock markets during the period spanning over half a century from January 1972 to July 2022, we find that $$\Delta {MIN}^{US}$$ Δ MIN US have strong predictive power for returns in most international stock markets: $$\Delta {MIN}^{US}$$ Δ MIN US negatively predicts the next-month stock market returns. The results remain robust after controlling for a number of macroeconomic predictors and conducting subsample and panel data analyses, indicating that $$\Delta {MIN}^{US}$$ Δ MIN US has significant predictive power and it outperforms other variables in international markets. Notably, $$\Delta {MIN}^{US}$$ Δ MIN US demonstrates excellent predictive power even during the periods driven by financial upheavals (e.g., Global Financial Crisis and European Sovereign Debt Crisis). Both panel regressions and out-of-sample tests also support the robust predictive performance of $$\Delta {MIN}^{US}$$ Δ MIN US . The predictive power, however, disappears during the non-financial crisis caused by COVID-19 pandemic, which is originated from the health sector rather than the financial sector. The results provide a new perspective on U.S. extreme indicator in stock market return predictability.

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