Measuring Bilateral Spillover and Testing Contagion on Sovereign Bond Markets in Europe
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2014-09-01Estado
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. The global financial crisis rapidly spread across borders and financial markets, and also distressed EU
bond markets. The crisis did not hit all markets in the same way. We measure the strength and direction
of linkages between 16 EU sovereign bond markets using a factor-augmented version of the VAR model in
Diebold and Yilmaz (2009). We then provide a novel test for contagion by applying the multivariate
structural break test of Qu and Perron (2007) on this FAVAR detecting significant sudden changes in
shock transmission. Results indicate substantial spillover, especially between EMU countries, with Bel-
gium, Italy and Spain being key markets during the financial crisis. Contagion has been a rather rare phe-
nomenon limited to a few well defined moments of uncertainty on financial assistance packages for
Greece, Ireland and Portugal. Most of the frequent surges in market co-movement are driven by larger
shocks rather than by contagion.
Ó 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
Losses on subprime loans in US banks have had global conse-
quences, as uncovered debt positions created a snowball debt
effect that brought down major financial institutions in both the
US and Europe. The ensuing financial crisis called for policy inter-
vention, not just by central banks, but also out of the deep pockets
of the tax payer. Massive public aid in support of the financial
sector, together with falling tax revenues and spending on recovery
plans to withstand the economic fall-out of the financial collapse,
unleashed a sovereign debt crisis.
Turbulence on European bond markets is just the latest chapter
in this string of events. Rising sovereign spreads set off a sequence
of fiscal bailouts, further trouble in the banking system, the down-
grading of all EMU countries but Germany, and de facto IMF inter-
ventions in several EU countries. These events demonstrate the
strong intertwining of European financial markets. Empirical stud-
ies confirm that sovereign bond yield spreads in EMU countries are
driven by international financial market conditions, and dominate
idiosyncratic risk factors such as default, liquidity and exchange
rate premia.
Attributing spread movements to international factors under-
lines the importance of financial integration, but gives an unsatis-
factory answer as to what causes those market developments in
the first place. Even international developments must eventually
be driven by events in some domestic market that then transmits
to all other markets, and feeds back to the source market. The flaw
of most studies is to proxy the external risk factors with an aggre-
gate measure that is supposedly exogenous to domestic events,
and affects all markets in a similar way. However, linkages are
not equally strong between all markets simultaneously
(Kaminsky and Reinhart, 2000). Those studies therefore have little
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbankfin.2014.05.011
0378-4266/Ó 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
⇑ Corresponding author. Tel.: +420 224414427; fax: +420 224414278.
E-mail addresses: peter.claeys@eui.eu (P. Claeys), borek.vasicek@cnb.cz, borek.
vasicek@gmail.com (B. Vašícˇek).
Journal of Banking & Finance 46 (2014) 151–165
Contents lists available at ScienceDirect
Journal of Banking & Finance
Measuring Bilateral Spillover and Testing Contagion on Sovereign Bond Markets in Europe
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
0378-4266Palabras Clave
.Spillover; Contagion; Fiscal policy; Eurozone; Financial crisis; FAVAR