Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
958188 | Journal of Economics and Business | 2012 | 15 Pages |
We examine market linkage and information spillover across the U.S. stock, corporate bond, and credit derivatives markets in the pre-crisis, crisis, and recovery periods. Our results suggest that information spills over across markets in a timely manner. We find that the market linkage becomes stronger in the crisis period, which could be explained by the increasing volatility and deteriorating funding liquidity. In particular, volatility plays a dominant role in the information transmission, which absorbs the liquidity effect when both volatility and liquidity are included as exogenous factors in a vector autoregressive model.
► We analyze the cross-market linkage from 2004 to 2009, which includes the recent global financial crisis. ► We examine the status of market linkage across stock, bond, and credit derivatives markets. ► We investigate the factors influencing the market linkage. ► We find that the correlation structure changes dramatically in the periods before and after the crisis. ► We find that volatility plays the dominant role in the information transmission.