Abstract

This study investigates movements of the stock return volatility during election periods (from one-year before an election to one-year after the election) with the use of data from 16 countries. The main findings of this study are (1) stock return volatility declines over time as elections approach, (2) the level of the stock return volatility during election periods is lower than that during non-election periods, and (3) the stock return volatility rises quickly during election months and immediately after the elections. The first and second findings confirm conjectures made on the dynamic pattern of the volatility in previous studies such as Pantzalis et al. (2000) and Wisniewski (2009).

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