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Islamic equity market integration and volatility spillover between emerging and US stock markets
Institution:1. International Centre for Education in Islamic Finance (INCEIF), Malaysia;2. Department of General Economics, Ghent University, Belgium;3. Department of Financial Economics, Ghent University, Belgium;4. Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies and Global Economic Governance Programme, University of Oxford, UK;1. Nottingham University Business School, The University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus, Malaysia;2. IIUM Institute of Islamic Banking and Finance, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;1. The Public Authority of Applied Education and Training, College of Business Studies, Kuwait;2. University of Western Sydney, School of Business, Australia
Abstract:The purpose of this paper is to study the conditional correlations across the US market and a sample of five Islamic emerging markets, namely Turkey, Indonesia, Pakistan, Qatar, and Malaysia. The empirical design uses MSCI (Morgan Stanley Capital International) Islamic equity index since it applies stringent restrictions to include companies. Indeed, two main restrictions must be met: (i) the business activity must be compliant with Shari’ah (i.e., Islamic law) guidelines and (ii) interest-bearing investments and leverage ratios should not exceed upper limits. Three models are used: multivariate GARCH BEKK, CCC, and DCC. The estimation results of the three models show that the US and Islamic emerging equity markets are weakly correlated over time. No sheer evidence supports that the US market spills over into the Islamic emerging equity markets. Besides interpreting the results in terms of weak market integration, the peculiar specificities of the Islamic finance industry and the admittance conditions to the MSCI Islamic equity index contribute to explaining them. Indeed, Islamic finance bans interest-bearing investments and imposes some rules, such as asset-backing, which has sizeable impacts on volatility spillover and shocks transmissions, alongside with the close linkage between real and financial sectors. These findings suggest that investors should take caution when investing in the Islamic emerging equity markets and diversifying their portfolios in order to minimize risk.
Keywords:Islamic finance  Volatility spillovers  Multivariate GARCH  Conditional correlations  BEKK  DCC  CCC
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