Abstract

Orientation: Globalisation of financial markets has made it progressively more difficult for effective diversification to exist, and as a result portfolio managers are in need of alternative diversification opportunities.Research purpose: Developed financial markets are more likely to be integrated with one another, and better diversification opportunities may be found in emerging markets.Research motivation: Limited research focuses on bond market diversification, and most research does not include South Africa as a diversification destination. This research examines whether developed bond market investors could use South African bonds to diversify their portfolios.Research design, approach and method: This article follows a quantitative research design with a causal-comparative or quasi-experimental approach. The econometric method used was primarily co-integration analysis establishing whether diversification opportunities exist between the South African bond market and five developed bond markets.Main findings: Overall, the findings showed that there was no co-integrating relationship between the South African bond market and developed bond markets, indicating that diversification may be possible in the long term. Furthermore, it was found that the South African bonds were less affected by short-term shocks compared with the developed market bonds.Practical/managerial implications: The results of this study indicated that South African bonds can be used to diversify a developed bond market investors portfolio. Developed bond market traders and fund managers should therefore consider holding South African bonds as a means of reducing their portfolio’s overall risk.Contribution/value-add: Holding South African bonds can be used to preserve a portfolio’s long-term wealth. Additionally, the resistance of South African bonds to short-run shocks also provides investors with a cushion against sudden and unexpected crises.

Highlights

  • Staff (2013) explains that modern finance is plagued by a host of unrelenting, risk-promoting scenarios

  • The findings presented indicate that South Africa could, provide a potential diversification opportunity

  • Thereafter, it was found that no significant causal relationships exist between the South African bond market and each of the other five developed bond markets

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Summary

Introduction

Staff (2013) explains that modern finance is plagued by a host of unrelenting, risk-promoting scenarios. Whether it is the introduction of new global risk factors or greater wealth accumulation expectations, investors are desperately attempting to find new ways to reduce financial risk (Staff 2013). The need for risk reduction methods has developed because of the massive increase in financial market integration. Studies by Harvey (2000), Wooldridge, Domanski and Cobau (2003) and Balli et al (2017) explain that the dominant driving force behind this is the increased transfer of information as a result of sudden and exponential advancements in computing technology. The rise of information technologies has brought the world closer than ever before, allowing easy and effective access to financial markets that were once worlds apart. Turner and Holton (2015) agree with this, adding that the post-Cold War era saw a major shift in the http://www.actacommercii.co.za

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