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The effects of news events on market contagion: Evidence from the 2007–2009 financial crisis
Institution:1. Professor and doctoral supervisor of the School of Economics, Capital University of Economics and Business;2. Postdoctoral Research Station, Hua Xia Bank Co., Ltd, Beijing, 100005, China
Abstract:In this paper, we use the quantile regression technique along with coexceedance, a contagion measure, to assess the extent to which news events contribute to contagion in the stock markets during the crisis period between 2007 and 2009. Studies have shown that, not only the subprime crisis leads to a global recession, but the effects on the global stock markets have also been significant. We track the news events, both in the UK and the US, using the global recession timeline. We observe that the news events related to ad hoc bailouts of individual banks from the UK have a contagion effect throughout the period for most of the countries under investigation. This, however, is not found to be the case for the news events originating from the US. Our findings regarding the evidence of contagion effects in the UK reinforce the argument that spreads and contagion—an outcome of the risk perception of financial markets—are solely a result of the behaviour of investors or other financial market participants.
Keywords:C01  C22  C31  C51  C58  G01  Credit crisis  Coexceedance  Quantile regression  News events  Risk perception
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