Borsa Istanbul Review (Sep 2021)

Asymmetric volatility connectedness among main international stock markets: A high frequency analysis

  • Walid Mensi,
  • Debasish Maitra,
  • Xuan Vinh Vo,
  • Sang Hoon Kang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 3
pp. 291 – 306

Abstract

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This paper examines the direction and extent of the asymmetric volatility connectedness among international equity markets using 5-minute interval data from 16 stock markets. We analyze asymmetric volatility connectedness using realized volatility and identify the magnitude of the volatility spillover and of the connectedness through networks. We decompose realized volatility into good and bad, and volatility spillover is time-varying and asymmetric. Bad volatility dominates good volatility in international stock markets. Macroeconomic shocks (negative interest rates in Japan, economic stress in China, a recession in Russia, and double-digit inflation in Brazil) increased volatility asymmetry. Asian markets are responsible for stronger negative spillover, thereby necessitating regulations to reduce the strong negative volatility connectedness with Asian markets.

Keywords