Abstract

Uncovering dynamic information flow between stock market indices has been the topic of several studies which exploited the notion of transfer entropy or Granger causality, its linear version. The output of the transfer entropy approach is a directed weighted graph measuring the information about the future state of each target provided by the knowledge of the state of each driving stock market index. In order to go beyond the pairwise description of the information flow, thus looking at higher order informational circuits, here we apply the partial information decomposition to triplets consisting of a pair of driving markets (belonging to America or Europe) and a target market in Asia. Our analysis, on daily data recorded during the years 2000 to 2019, allows the identification of the synergistic information that a pair of drivers carry about the target. By studying the influence of the closing returns of drivers on the subsequent overnight changes of target indexes, we find that (i) Korea, Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Singapore are, in order, the most influenced Asian markets; (ii) US indices SP500 and Russell are the strongest drivers with respect to the bivariate Granger causality; and (iii) concerning higher order effects, pairs of European and American stock market indices play a major role as the most synergetic three-variables circuits. Our results show that the Synergy, a proxy of higher order predictive information flow rooted in information theory, provides details that are complementary to those obtained from bivariate and global Granger causality, and can thus be used to get a better characterization of the global financial system.

Highlights

  • We focus on the information flow originating in the European and American markets and impacting on Asian financial markets

  • We show the results for windows corresponding to one calendar year, a conventional and interpretable duration, and leave to further research the development of methods to deal locally in time the issue of synergistic information flow

  • We consider an overall measure of predictive information transfer between two groups of variables, see in [22], computing the global Granger causality (GGC) from European and American markets to the Asian market as follows, G =

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The overall performance of these markets is typically summarized by stock market indices. Economic globalization has interconnected financial markets of different countries. Economic and financial news generated or associated with a specific market are almost immediately transmitted to the other markets by professional information providers, media, and social media, making the global financial system highly interconnected. The influence of foreign investment on emerging countries has been investigated thoroughly in [1], and it has been shown that emerging and mature markets are much more integrated today than in the past. The influence among Pacific Rim countries has been explored in [2]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call