Abstract

PurposeThe authors aim to examine the mean and volatility linkages between the gold market and the Latin American equity markets in the entire sample period and two crises periods, namely the US financial crisis and the Chinese crash.Design/methodology/approachTo examine the return and volatility spillovers, the authors employ VAR-BEKK-GARCH model on the daily data of four emerging Latin American equity markets which include Peru, Chile, Brazil and Mexico, which ranges from January 2000 to June 2018.FindingsThe results show that the return transmissions vary across the stock markets and the crises periods. The volatility transmission is found to be bidirectional between the gold and stock markets of Brazil and Chile during the US financial crisis. Furthermore, the volatility spillover is unidirectional from Brazil to gold and from gold to Peru stock market during the Chinese crash. We also calculate the optimal weights hedge ratios for gold and stock portfolio. The result suggests that portfolio managers need to increase the weight of gold for the equity portfolios of Peru and Mexico during the US financial crisis. Furthermore, during the Chinese crisis, investors may raise the investment in gold for the equity portfolios of Brazil and Chile. Finally, the cheapest hedging strategy is CHIL/GOLD during the US financial crisis, whereas MEXI/GOLD during the Chinese crash.Practical implicationsThese findings have useful insights for portfolio diversification, asset pricing and risk management.Originality/valueThe study's outcome provides policymakers and investors with in-depth insights regarding hedging, risk management and portfolio management.

Highlights

  • The stock markets are crucial in the optimal allocation and mobilization of financial resources to support economic activities (Carp, 2012)

  • The results indicate bidirectional volatility transmission between equity markets of Brazil and Chile and the gold, highlighting that the portfolios of gold and these two equity markets provide no opportunities for diversifications

  • The results show that the return spillovers for gold-stock pairs vary across stock markets and crisis periods

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Summary

Introduction

The stock markets are crucial in the optimal allocation and mobilization of financial resources to support economic activities (Carp, 2012). The stock markets were adversely affected by several financial crises (Bouri, 2015; Umar et al, 2021b), and investors suffered massive losses. Investors are always searching for alternate assets/safe haven that can diversify the risk of stocks portfolios during crises episodes. It is important to examine the gold-stock nexus during the crisis’s episodes to provide valuable insights to the investors and portfolio. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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