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Price effects of steel commodities on worldwide stock market returns
Institution:1. California State University Bakersfield, School of Business and Public Administration, CSUB Stockdale Hwy, Bakersfield, CA 93311, United States;2. Ministry of Finance of Brazil, Superintendence of Administration of the Ministry of Finance in Santa Catarina (SAMF/SC), Rua Nunes Machado 192, Centro, Florianópolis, SC 88010-460, Brazil;1. V.C. Consultants, Los Leones 1300, Suite 1202, Santiago, Chile;2. Finance and Economics Division, Columbia University, Uris Hall, 3022 Broadway, New York, NY 10027, USA;3. CLAPES UC, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Alameda 440, Piso 13, Santiago, Chile;1. Département des sciences administratives, Université du Québec (Outaouais), Campus St. Jérôme, 5 rue St Joseph, St Jérôme, Québec J7Z 0B7, Canada;2. Université du Québec (Montréal), École des sciences de la gestion, 315 Ste.-Catherine est, R-2915, Montréal, Québec H2X 3X2, Canada;3. Chaire d’information financière et organisationnelle (Université du Québec à Montréal), and Université du Québec en Outaouais, Canada;1. Graduate School of Management, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, Taiwan;2. Department of Risk Management and Insurance, National Chengchi University, Taiwan;3. School of Business, Central South University, China;4. Department of Financial Engineering and Actuarial Mathematics, Soochow University, Taiwan
Abstract:We analyze the price effects of steel commodities on stock market returns in emerging and developed economies. These commodities have recently attained increased media exposure due to the rise in the U.S. steel import tariffs, which pose the threat of reducing global demand for steel products and, consequently, lowering prices abroad. However, little has been investigated on the impact of steel commodity prices on worldwide stock market returns. By performing structural VAR and GARCH techniques on a weekly-frequency time series from 2002 to 2015, we find positive and statistically significant effects of linear and non-linear steel commodity price shocks on real stock returns in the commodity markets. In the highly diversified financial markets such as U.S. and Germany, real stock returns do not significantly respond to steel commodity price shocks, although we find highly significant positive responses from developed economies such as Australia, Japan and South Korea. Results are robust to different model specifications. Our evidence suggests that higher tariffs on steel imports represent a larger disadvantage to commodity markets which are more largely impacted by steel commodity prices. We provide economic policy implications based on recent literature.
Keywords:Commodities  Import tariffs  Stock market  Time-series models  Trade policy  WTO
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