Abstract

We propose measures of the total volatility spillover, the regional volatility spillovers of 11 countries, and the directional volatility spillovers between Chinese and world equity markets from February 1996 to December 2009, based on forecast-error variance decompositions in a generalized vector autoregressive framework given by Diebold and Yilmaz (2010). It is found that: 1) The Chinese stock market was little affected by other equity markets in the sample period. After 2005, the volatility of the Chinese market had a significantly positive impact on other markets; 2) The volatility interactions among the Chinese, Hong Kong and Taiwan markets are more prominent than those among the Chinese, Western and other Asian markets. The volatility spillovers among the Chinese, Japanese and Indian markets are more distinctive than those among the Chinese, US and UK markets; 3) The US market had dominant volatility impacts on other markets during the subprime mortgage crisis. While the other markets were very volatile, driven by the bad news, their huge volatility has been transmitted back to the US market; 4) The major correction of Chinese stock market between February and July 2007 significantly contributed to the volatility surges of other markets. Due to the restriction of foreign investment, the Chinese stock market has not been greatly affected in terms of market volatility during the crisis.

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