197 research outputs found
Financial Market Linkages in South Asia: Evidence Using a Multivariate GARCH Model
Regional integration of the financial markets is the building-block for globalisation and internationalisation. Many regions around the world have recently been engaged in such regional economic and financial market integration to form the basis of a more complex international financial system. The recent developments in South Asia and the revived activities under the SAARC forum have raised some hopes for a more sustained economic development in the regional economies. It is timely, therefore, to investigate the prospects of regional financial market integration in the South Asian region. In this perspective, this paper analyses the currency market integration within four South Asian countries and with their major trading partners. For empirical estimation, we use data from a sample of four South Asian countries, namely, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. The paper examines the nature of the causal relationship between exchange rates in the sample countries and their major trading partners. Both the short-run and the long-run causal relationships between these markets are examined using high-frequency data of exchange rates. The paper also explores whether the causal linkages between these variables are of similar intensity across the country and across the market. The nature of the mean and volatility transmission between stock and foreign exchange markets is explored through multivariate exponential GARCH model, which is capable of capturing asymmetries in the volatility transmission mechanism in both the short run and the long run within a co-integration framework. The departing feature of this approach is that it captures both linear and non-linear relationships, which are linked through second order moments. We believe that this to be fresh research on this issue for South Asia and it may have important implications for any future policy for the region.Financial Market, South Asia, GARCH Model
Financial Market Linkages in South Asia: Evidence Using a Multivariate GARCH Model
The economic and social benefits of more openness and
internationalisation are well supported by both academics and
policy-makers. Many countries are also trying to become part of the
world trade bloc such as the World Trade Organisation (WTO) or AFTA.
Efforts are also made to strengthen the existing regional economic and
trade coordination or establish new regional economic and financial
integration. Unfortunately, at the time (during the 1980s and 1990s)
when many emerging economies in East Asia were involved in openness,
internationalisation and regional economic and financial integration,
the South Asian countries wasted their resources in dealing with
political crisis (such as Bangladesh), internal conflicts (such as Sri
Lanka) or border issues (such as India and Pakistan). It is only
recently that regimes have realised that a peaceful economic environment
is essential to attract foreign investment, pursue a pro-growth policy
and achieve a sustainable growth. The recent dialogue between Pakistan
and India and some progress in SAARC consultation are a few steps
towards these goals
Financial Market Integration in Pakistan: Evidence Using Post-1999 Data
The recent wave of financial sector reforms and
internationalisation in emerging markets has increased perceived
interlinkages within various sectors of national financial markets. For
example, the existence of a strong linkage between stock prices and
exchange rates is a popular topic in academic research. Similarly,
changes in stock prices and exchange rates are expected to influence
movements in interest rates. A number of hypotheses suggest such a
causal relationship. For instance, using a goods market approach, any
changes in the value of currency would affect the competitiveness of
multinational firms and hence influence stock prices [Dornbusch and
Fischer (1980)]. Similarly, the hypotheses of ‘exchange rate
pass-through’ and ‘interest rate pass-through’ suggest that changes in
exchange rates and/or interest rates could affect stock prices. The
portfolio balance model suggests that fluctuations in stock prices
influence exchange rate changes
Drivers of formal and informal retail patronage in emerging markets
Purpose: This study examines how formal retail formats (FRFs), and informal retail formats (IRFs) may coexist as substitutes and complements in emerging markets because of store patronage driven by customers’ chronic shopping orientations, and differences in salesperson consultation in the two retail formats.Design/methodology/approach: Using a shopping motivational orientation framework, we develop and test a moderated mediation model using survey data from 515 shoppers of formal and informal grocery retail outlets in India.Findings: While task-focused and experiential-focused shopping orientations influence both FRF and IRF patronage, store satisfaction mediates these relationships and crucially attenuates the negative impact of task-focused orientation on FRF patronage. Salesperson consultation moderates the mediating effects of satisfaction in the link between shopping orientation and patronage of both FRFs and IRFs.Research limitations/implications: The findings suggest that FRFs and IRFs could coexist as complements and substitutes when patronage is examined as repeated visits determined by shopping orientation, mediated by satisfaction and moderated by salesperson consultation.Practical implications: For FRFs and IRFs to be complements, both formats must prioritize their distinctive attributes that satisfy a consumer\u27s chronic shopping orientation. Substitution depends on how both retail formats prioritize salesperson consultation and in-store characteristics that appeal to consumers’ chronic orientation during specific shopping trips.Originality/value: Whilst FRFs must satisfy task-focused shoppers to compete with IRFs, salesperson consultation can inhibit such satisfaction. However, the extent of coexistence between FRFs and IRFs depends on how each format leverages salesperson consultation to enhance satisfaction of experiential-focused shoppers
Theoretical modeling of propagation of magneto-acoustic waves in magnetic regions below sunspots
We use 2D numerical simulations and eikonal approximation, to study
properties of MHD waves traveling below the solar surface through the magnetic
structure of sunspots. We consider a series of magnetostatic models of sunspots
of different magnetic field strengths, from 10 Mm below the photosphere to the
low chromosphere. The purpose of these studies is to quantify the effect of the
magnetic field on local helioseismology measurements by modeling waves excited
by sub-photospheric sources. Time-distance propagation diagrams and wave travel
times are calculated for models of various field strength and compared to the
non-magnetic case. The results clearly indicate that the observed time-distance
helioseismology signals in sunspot regions correspond to fast MHD waves. The
slow MHD waves form a distinctly different pattern in the time-distance
diagram, which has not been detected in observations. The numerical results are
in good agreement with the solution in the short-wavelength (eikonal)
approximation, providing its validation. The frequency dependence of the travel
times is in a good qualitative agreement with observations.Comment: accepted by Ap
Signatures of the impact of flare ejected plasma on the photosphere of a sunspot light-bridge
We investigate the properties of a sunspot light-bridge, focusing on the
changes produced by the impact of a plasma blob ejected from a C-class flare.
We observed a sunspot in active region NOAA 12544 using spectropolarimetric
raster maps of the four Fe I lines around 15655 \AA\ with the GREGOR Infrared
Spectrograph (GRIS), narrow-band intensity images sampling the Fe I 6173 \AA\
line with the GREGOR Fabry-P\'erot Interferometer (GFPI), and intensity broad
band images in G-band and Ca II H band with the High-resolution Fast Imager
(HiFI). All these instruments are located at the GREGOR telescope at the
Observatorio del Teide, Tenerife, Spain. The data cover the time before,
during, and after the flare event. The analysis is complemented with
Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) and Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI)
data from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). The physical parameters of the
atmosphere at differents heights were inferred using spectral-line inversion
techniques. We identify photospheric and chromospheric brightenings, heating
events, and changes in the Stokes profiles associated to the flare eruption and
the subsequent arrival of the plasma blob to the light bridge, after traveling
along an active region loop. The measurements suggest that these phenomena are
the result of reconnection events driven by the interaction of the plasma blob
with the magnetic field topology of the light bridge.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Ring diagram analysis of the characteristics of solar oscillation modes in active regions
The presence of intense magnetic fields in and around sunspots is expected to
modify the solar structure and oscillation frequencies. Applying the ring
diagram technique to data from the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) on board the
Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), we analyze the characteristics of
high-degree f and p modes near active regions and compare them with the
characteristics of the modes in quiet regions. As expected from earlier
results, the f- and p-mode frequencies of high degree modes are found to be
significantly larger in magnetically active regions. In addition, we find that
the power in both f and p modes is lower in active regions, while the widths of
the peaks are larger, indicating smaller lifetimes. We also find that the
oscillation modes are more asymmetric in active regions than those in quiet
regions, indicating that modes in active regions are excited closer to the
surface. While the increase in mode frequency is monotonic in frequency, all
other characteristics show more complex frequency dependences.Comment: To appear in Ap
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