Abstract

This paper investigates the effect of the Brexit vote on the connection between UK stock market expectations and US stock market returns. To gauge UK stock market expectations, the option-implied volatilities of the FTSE 100 index are calculated in the period starting five months before and ending four months after the Brexit referendum. To keep the analysis “clean”, it stops right before the 2016 US presidential elections. It uses an OLS regression to estimate the change in the relationship between US and UK stock market expectations.The main findings show that the US and UK stock markets became somewhat less integrated four months after the Brexit referendum compared to the five months before it. The S&P 500 Index returns have a statistically significant impact on implied volatilities of the FTSE 100 only before the Brexit referendum. However, the British risk-free rate (LIBOR) became a statistically significant factor affecting FTSE 100 implied volatilities only after Brexit. This analysis may be used by decision-makers in the money management industry to act appropriately during Black Swan events. When UK citizens unexpectedly voted in favor of Brexit, the risk-free rate dropped, making it cheaper to invest, increasing the Sharpe ratios of equity portfolios. Coupled with increased uncertainty, this caused portfolio reallocations. In turn, expected volatility measured by options-implied volatility increased. AcknowledgmentThe authors would like to thank Olesia Verchenko for critique, a KSE M.A., external defense reviewer for helpful comments.

Highlights

  • Once in a while, significant and unexpected events impact financial markets

  • This study examines the British British Exit (Brexit) referendum, which was held on June 23, 2016

  • One can answer this question using option price distributions, which give us the possibility to extract the expectation as implied volatility (IV) and run a regression to estimate the changes in the connection between the two markets

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Summary

Introduction

Over the last five years, there have been three such events: a positive British Exit (Brexit) referendum, elections of Donald J. Out of the array of possible questions, one is whether the linkage between the US and UK stock market expectations was changed as measured by the implied-option volatilities. One can answer this question using option price distributions, which give us the possibility to extract the expectation as implied volatility (IV) and run a regression to estimate the changes in the connection between the two markets. Using implied volatility as a dependent variable, one can answer whether there is a change in the relationship between two markets and see how they can influence each other

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