Theoretical and Empirical Evidence of the Influence of Economic Linkages on Stock Returns

Theoretical and Empirical Evidence of the Influence of Economic Linkages on Stock Returns PDF Author: Ramona Meyricke
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :

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Book Description
Inter-linkages between suppliers and customers are a channel by which shocks can spread between firms. When firms buy and sell intermediate goods from one another, they may rely on each other for the supply of input goods or for cash-flow from sales. This is a problem because financially distressed suppliers can pose significant risk to the economic activity of customers that rely on them for goods and services. A case in point is the heavy loss suffered by General Motors when its equipment and parts supplier Delphi went on strike in 1998. Vice-versa, distressed customers can negatively impact suppliers' business operations. Real economic activities are highly related to major stock pricing factors. The main hypothesis of this thesis is that shocks to a firm's direct and indirect suppliers and customers influence its stock price. There is a large amount of research addressing how shocks spread between international financial markets and asset classes influence stock prices during financial crises (financial contagion). Past research has identified the macroeconomic conditions and the types of linkages between markets and assets that make a country or market vulnerable to financial contagion. Little is known, however, about how shocks spread via economic linkages influence firm-level stock returns. Studies find that significant movements in a firm's stock price forecast subsequent movements in the stock price of its major suppliers. Several questions remain open, however, regarding how shocks spread via economic linkages influence stock returns, such as: how shocks spread via economic linkages influence return volatility and correlation; what characteristics of economic linkages (e.g. the degree or the concentration of linkage) are most important in the process of contagion; and whether the spread of shocks via economic linkages increases during recessions. The main objective of this thesis is to increase knowledge of how economic linkages between firms influence stock returns. My approach is to examine how a firm's economic linkages influence three dimensions of its stock returns: volatility, pairwise correlation between linked firms' returns and the cross-sectional distribution of average returns. The research questions addressed are: 1. How does the structure of a firm's economic linkages influence the volatility of its stock returns? 2. How do shocks transmitted via economic linkages increase correlation between linked firms' returns? 3. How do shocks transmitted via economic linkages affect average returns, cross-sectionally and over time? For each dimension of stock returns (volatility, pairwise correlation and average returns) I examine what characteristics of economic linkages are most influential, and whether the influence of economic linkages increases in recessions. I develop a theoretical model explaining how the spread of cash-flow shocks via economic linkages between firms influences the volatility, pairwise correlation and average level of stock returns. The reduced form of the theoretical model corresponds to a factor model of stock returns (based on Arbitrage Pricing Theory), with an additional factor added to allow for non-diversifiable risk created by economic linkages. This model describes the relationship between economic linkages and return volatility, pairwise correlation and average returns. To answer the first research question, I apply the Lindeberg-Feller theorem to derive an explicit relationship between a firm's stock return volatility and the structure of its linkages to other firms. I prove that when the distribution a firm's economic linkages is heavy-tailed (such that it has an extremely high degree of economic linkage to a few firms and a far lower degree of economic linkage to all others), shocks to the firm's key suppliers and/or customers can significantly influence its return volatility. Intuitively, shocks to the most connected suppliers and/or customers are not offset by shocks to less connected suppliers and/or customers, so they can significantly influence a firm's cash-flow and therefore stock returns. Monte Carlo simulations con firm that shocks transmitted via economic linkages are diversified away at rate much slower than the 1/(√N) rate implied by the law of large numbers in many common supply chain structures. In these 'concentrated' supply chain structures, shocks transmitted via economic linkages can create portfolio return volatility in excess of that explained by systematic risk factors, even in large portfolios. To answer the second and third research questions, I use monthly stock return data and annual accounting data on the major customers of all listed US firms between 1990 and 2010 from the CRSP/Compustat database. To investigate how shocks transmitted via economic linkages influence correlation between linked firms' returns, I test the hypothesis that an increase in the degree of linkage between two firms increases the pairwise correlation between their stock returns. First, I adapt correlation-based tests of contagion to test whether pairwise return correlation is higher when two firms are linked than when they are not linked. Second, I develop measures of the strength of pairwise linkage between firms (using principles from network theory and economic input-output modeling). I then estimate regressions of firm-pairs' return correlation against the strength of their linkage and a number of controls (such as industry-pair fixed-effects and credit usage along the supply chain). The regression results show that an increase in the economic linkage between two firms is associated with increased correlation between their stock returns. Linked firms' returns are more correlated when credit is involved in the supplier-customer relationship and in recessions, implying that it is harder to replace a supplier or customer in these situations. Finally, I test whether shocks spread via economic linkages influence average stock returns over and above other factors that have been shown to influence stock returns. My method is to develop measures of the degree and concentration of a firm's supplier and customer linkages. I include these measures in a factor model of stock returns alongside a number of other factors that have been shown to explain stock returns. Cross-sectional regressions show that, in a given time-period, firms with more concentrated supplier bases have higher average returns than firms with less concentrated supplier bases. Second, time-series regressions showed that an increase in the concentration of a firm's supplier-base lowered realized returns in the following period. These results suggest that investors demand a positive risk premium (higher expected return) for holding the stock of firms whose supplier-base is concentrated. This places downward pressure on prices following an increase in supplier-base concentration. While concentration of a firm's supplier and customer linkages has a significant influence on stock returns, the magnitude of this effect is small compared to the influence of systematic risk factors. The influence of economic linkages on stock returns, however, increases in recessions. Together the results in this thesis provide solid evidence that shocks spread via economic linkages can affect the volatility, correlation and average level of stock returns. The thesis establishes a robust framework for modeling the returns of portfolios in which the underlying securities or firms are linked via economic relationships. This is an important extension to existing models that ignore the potential impact of shocks spread via linkages between firms on stock prices. The model can be used for pricing securities with concentrated supply chain exposures or to identify stock portfolios that are susceptible to contagion.

Theoretical and Empirical Evidence of the Influence of Economic Linkages on Stock Returns

Theoretical and Empirical Evidence of the Influence of Economic Linkages on Stock Returns PDF Author: Ramona Meyricke
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :

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Book Description
Inter-linkages between suppliers and customers are a channel by which shocks can spread between firms. When firms buy and sell intermediate goods from one another, they may rely on each other for the supply of input goods or for cash-flow from sales. This is a problem because financially distressed suppliers can pose significant risk to the economic activity of customers that rely on them for goods and services. A case in point is the heavy loss suffered by General Motors when its equipment and parts supplier Delphi went on strike in 1998. Vice-versa, distressed customers can negatively impact suppliers' business operations. Real economic activities are highly related to major stock pricing factors. The main hypothesis of this thesis is that shocks to a firm's direct and indirect suppliers and customers influence its stock price. There is a large amount of research addressing how shocks spread between international financial markets and asset classes influence stock prices during financial crises (financial contagion). Past research has identified the macroeconomic conditions and the types of linkages between markets and assets that make a country or market vulnerable to financial contagion. Little is known, however, about how shocks spread via economic linkages influence firm-level stock returns. Studies find that significant movements in a firm's stock price forecast subsequent movements in the stock price of its major suppliers. Several questions remain open, however, regarding how shocks spread via economic linkages influence stock returns, such as: how shocks spread via economic linkages influence return volatility and correlation; what characteristics of economic linkages (e.g. the degree or the concentration of linkage) are most important in the process of contagion; and whether the spread of shocks via economic linkages increases during recessions. The main objective of this thesis is to increase knowledge of how economic linkages between firms influence stock returns. My approach is to examine how a firm's economic linkages influence three dimensions of its stock returns: volatility, pairwise correlation between linked firms' returns and the cross-sectional distribution of average returns. The research questions addressed are: 1. How does the structure of a firm's economic linkages influence the volatility of its stock returns? 2. How do shocks transmitted via economic linkages increase correlation between linked firms' returns? 3. How do shocks transmitted via economic linkages affect average returns, cross-sectionally and over time? For each dimension of stock returns (volatility, pairwise correlation and average returns) I examine what characteristics of economic linkages are most influential, and whether the influence of economic linkages increases in recessions. I develop a theoretical model explaining how the spread of cash-flow shocks via economic linkages between firms influences the volatility, pairwise correlation and average level of stock returns. The reduced form of the theoretical model corresponds to a factor model of stock returns (based on Arbitrage Pricing Theory), with an additional factor added to allow for non-diversifiable risk created by economic linkages. This model describes the relationship between economic linkages and return volatility, pairwise correlation and average returns. To answer the first research question, I apply the Lindeberg-Feller theorem to derive an explicit relationship between a firm's stock return volatility and the structure of its linkages to other firms. I prove that when the distribution a firm's economic linkages is heavy-tailed (such that it has an extremely high degree of economic linkage to a few firms and a far lower degree of economic linkage to all others), shocks to the firm's key suppliers and/or customers can significantly influence its return volatility. Intuitively, shocks to the most connected suppliers and/or customers are not offset by shocks to less connected suppliers and/or customers, so they can significantly influence a firm's cash-flow and therefore stock returns. Monte Carlo simulations con firm that shocks transmitted via economic linkages are diversified away at rate much slower than the 1/(√N) rate implied by the law of large numbers in many common supply chain structures. In these 'concentrated' supply chain structures, shocks transmitted via economic linkages can create portfolio return volatility in excess of that explained by systematic risk factors, even in large portfolios. To answer the second and third research questions, I use monthly stock return data and annual accounting data on the major customers of all listed US firms between 1990 and 2010 from the CRSP/Compustat database. To investigate how shocks transmitted via economic linkages influence correlation between linked firms' returns, I test the hypothesis that an increase in the degree of linkage between two firms increases the pairwise correlation between their stock returns. First, I adapt correlation-based tests of contagion to test whether pairwise return correlation is higher when two firms are linked than when they are not linked. Second, I develop measures of the strength of pairwise linkage between firms (using principles from network theory and economic input-output modeling). I then estimate regressions of firm-pairs' return correlation against the strength of their linkage and a number of controls (such as industry-pair fixed-effects and credit usage along the supply chain). The regression results show that an increase in the economic linkage between two firms is associated with increased correlation between their stock returns. Linked firms' returns are more correlated when credit is involved in the supplier-customer relationship and in recessions, implying that it is harder to replace a supplier or customer in these situations. Finally, I test whether shocks spread via economic linkages influence average stock returns over and above other factors that have been shown to influence stock returns. My method is to develop measures of the degree and concentration of a firm's supplier and customer linkages. I include these measures in a factor model of stock returns alongside a number of other factors that have been shown to explain stock returns. Cross-sectional regressions show that, in a given time-period, firms with more concentrated supplier bases have higher average returns than firms with less concentrated supplier bases. Second, time-series regressions showed that an increase in the concentration of a firm's supplier-base lowered realized returns in the following period. These results suggest that investors demand a positive risk premium (higher expected return) for holding the stock of firms whose supplier-base is concentrated. This places downward pressure on prices following an increase in supplier-base concentration. While concentration of a firm's supplier and customer linkages has a significant influence on stock returns, the magnitude of this effect is small compared to the influence of systematic risk factors. The influence of economic linkages on stock returns, however, increases in recessions. Together the results in this thesis provide solid evidence that shocks spread via economic linkages can affect the volatility, correlation and average level of stock returns. The thesis establishes a robust framework for modeling the returns of portfolios in which the underlying securities or firms are linked via economic relationships. This is an important extension to existing models that ignore the potential impact of shocks spread via linkages between firms on stock prices. The model can be used for pricing securities with concentrated supply chain exposures or to identify stock portfolios that are susceptible to contagion.

An Empirical Investigation of Stock Markets

An Empirical Investigation of Stock Markets PDF Author: Shigeyuki Hamori
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
ISBN: 1441992081
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 140

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Book Description
An Empirical Investigation of Stock Markets: The CCF Approach attempts to make an empirical contribution to the literature on the movements of stock prices in major economies, i.e. Germany, Japan, the UK and the USA. Specifically, the cross-correlation function (CCF) approach is used to analyze the stock market. This volume provides some empirical evidence regarding the economic linkages among a group of different countries. Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 analyze the international linkage of stock prices among Germany, Japan, the UK and the USA. Chapter 2 applies the standard approach, whereas Chapter 3 uses the CCF approach. Chapter 4 analyzes the relationship between stock prices and exchange rates. Chapter 5 analyzes the relationship among stock prices, exchange rates, and real economic activities. Chapter 6 summarizes the main results obtained in each chapter and comments on the possible directions of future research.

Economic Linkages Inferred from News Stories and the Predictability of Stock Returns

Economic Linkages Inferred from News Stories and the Predictability of Stock Returns PDF Author: Anna Scherbina
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 53

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Book Description
We show that news stories contain information about economic linkages between firms and document that information diffuses slowly across linked stocks. Specifically, we identify linked stocks from co-mentions in news stories and find that linked stocks cross-predict one another's returns in the future. Our results indicate that information can flow from smaller to larger stocks and across industries. Content analysis of common news stories reveals many types of firm linkages that have not been previously studied. We find that the cross-predictability in returns remains even after firm pairs with customer-supplier ties are removed. Results show that both limited attention and slow processing of complex information contribute to slow information diffusion.

The Influence of Customer-Supplier Linkages on Stock Returns

The Influence of Customer-Supplier Linkages on Stock Returns PDF Author: Jamie Alcock
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 42

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Book Description
Investors in firms with concentrated supplier or customer bases should not assume that idiosyncratic shocks to an economically linked firm disappear in a well-diversified portfolio. Customer-supplier linkages between firms are a channel by which shocks to a single firm can influence the stock returns of other, linked firms. When the distribution of connectivity in a firm's economic network is fat-tailed, individual firm-level shocks do not average out in aggregate. Consequently, firms with concentrated supplier or customer bases have higher average returns than firms with more diversified supplier or customer exposures.

Return Linkages Among Returns from Stock Markets

Return Linkages Among Returns from Stock Markets PDF Author: Gagan Deep Sharma
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 12

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Book Description
This paper studies inter-linkages among returns from stock markets in Japan, USA, England, India and China. Daily closing levels of benchmark indices in five countries are taken for period 6th January 2003 to 21st September 2013. Augmented Dickey-Fuller unit-root test is applied to check stationary nature of the series; Regression analysis, Granger's causality model, Vector Auto Regression model, and Variance Decomposition Analysis to find out the linkages between returns. The study leads to two major findings. First, that there exist opportunities for diversification for the investors, and second is the domestic factors (macro economic variables) that influence stock markets.

Essays on the Linkage Between Oil Price and Stock Market Returns

Essays on the Linkage Between Oil Price and Stock Market Returns PDF Author: Mohan Singh Nandha
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 408

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Book Description
Oil is a special type of commodity which plays a significant role in modem economic activity. The influence of the oil (crude oil) price on stock markets is often recognised and reported in the financial press. This thesis examines the role of the oil price in explaining stock market returns. By applying different methodologies and datasets, empirical evidence has been gathered on various dimensions of the issue which include short-run and long-run comparisons, cross-country analysis, sector¬focused analysis, cross-sector comparisons and a global view. Four of the studies included in this thesis use multi-country data and four are based on multi-sector equity data. Overall, all countries and all sectors (subject to data availability) have been covered in one or another study. Results of a study focused on India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka (all net oil importers) indicate several industries to be significantly sensitive to the oil price factor in the long-run, whereas very little sensitivity to oil price is detected in the short run. Perhaps, this might be an indication that because of the regulated nature of fuel pricing in all three countries, it could take time before the price change is aJlowed to impact consumers and firms. Cross country and cross sector comparisons suggest that the oil price impact on stock market returns is inconsistent across countries and varies across sectors. These differences might be a consequence of regulatory and structural disparities across countries. Across sector variations may result from differing sector abilities to pass on higher fuel costs to customers. In addition, intensity of a sector to the use of oil and its by-products would also make a difference. Two of the studies are sector focused, covering the 'oil and gas' and 'transportation' sectors. These sectors are special in a sense that oil is the main output for the first sector and a major cost component for the second sector. Evidence from the U.S. market suggests that oil and gas stock returns are positively sensitive to the oil price, but an oil risk premium is not priced in the returns. This finding could suggest that oil price risk is diversifiable or can be effectively hedged by investors in oil and gas stocks. The transport sector focused study provides a global perspective in a sense that all countries are covered. This study is supportive of oil playing a jointly significant role in the transport sector returns for the Developed, Europe and 07 country groups. Finally, a study based on global sector indices is indicative of a negative impact on all sector returns except the mining, and oil and gas sectors. These results are consistent with the theoretical logic that a rise in the oil price is likely to reduce the profitability of firms which use oil and/or by-products of oil. This type of agreement between the theory and empirical evidence may also suggest that globally diversified and sector specific portfolios are the best choice for analysing the oil price sensitivity of stock market returns. Overall, oil appears to have some connectivity with the pricing of equities but various types of cross country and cross sector disparities make the pricing dynamics complex and difficult to quantify in exact terms.

The Relationship of Interest Rates and Stock Returns

The Relationship of Interest Rates and Stock Returns PDF Author: Nargiz Nasirova
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 77

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Book Description
It is accepted that stock returns are influenced by numerous economic and fundamental factors. This masters thesis aims to investigate the influence of economic factors such as interest rate on stock returns. The thesis explores the theoretical aspects of stock return fluctuations and the factors that influence them, interest rates as an important economic variable, and the interrelation of interest rates and stock returns. In specific, the thesis provides empirical research which examines the relationship between interest rates and stock returns in the Austrian market for the period of October 2004 to August 2014. The empirical part includes an analysis of the effects of six interest rates on stock indices changes in Austria. The research provides empirical evidence of the presence of a positive linear relationship between several interest rates and Austrian stock returns. The explanatory power of regression models increases after adding a market variable. The difference in interest rate sensitivity of different industries is confirmed. The results of this research are in line with the results of previous studies.*****It is accepted that stock returns are influenced by numerous economic and fundamental factors. This masters thesis aims to investigate the influence of economic factors such as interest rate on stock returns. The thesis explores the theoretical aspects of stock return fluctuations and the factors that influence them, interest rates as an important economic variable, and the interrelation of interest rates and stock returns. In specific, the thesis provides empirical research which examines the relationship between interest rates and stock returns in the Austrian market for the period of October 2004 to August 2014. The empirical part includes an analysis of the effects of six interest rates on stock indices changes in Austria. The research provides empirical evidence of the presence of a positive linear relationship between several interest rates and Austrian stock returns. The explanatory power of regression models increases after adding a market variable. The difference in interest rate sensitivity of different industries is confirmed. The results of this research are in line with the results of previous studies.

Measuring International Economic Linkages with Stock Market Data

Measuring International Economic Linkages with Stock Market Data PDF Author: John Ammer
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :

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Book Description
We decompose domestic and foreign equity return innovations into components associated with news about dividend growth, interest rates, exchange rates, and future equity risk premiums. This decomposition enables us to determine the extent to which common real and financial shocks contribute to covariation between the returns on different national stock markets. An application to U.S. and U.K. data from 1957 to 1989 reveals substantial degrees of both real and financial integration between the two economies. Although common news about future risk premiums accounts for the bulk of the covariance between the two country's stock markets, the dividend growth components of the two returns are also highly correlated. Both real and financial linkages are found to be greater after the Bretton Woods currency arrangement was abandoned in the early 1970's. In a further application of our methodology to data from 15 countries from 1974 to 1990, we find that both real and financial integration typically contribute to the (consistently positive) correlations between the returns on national stock markets. In most cases, news about future dividend growth in two countries is more highly correlated than contemporaneous output measures. This suggests that there are lags in the international transmission of real economic shocks.

Recent Developments in International Banking and Finance

Recent Developments in International Banking and Finance PDF Author: Sarkis J. Khoury
Publisher: North Holland
ISBN: 9780444886262
Category : Banks and banking
Languages : en
Pages : 524

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Book Description
This book contains theoretical and applied papers dealing with issues at the cutting edge of international banking and finance. Some of these papers were presented at the fifth symposium on International Banking and Finance held in Baden Baden, Germany, April 1990, organized by The Foundation for Research in International Banking and Finance (FBRIF). The symposium was decidedly focused on Eastern Europe and Western Europe after 1991 and represented a balance between academic and nonacademic presentations. In addition to these lectures, more papers within this scope are published in the book. The book constitutes excellent material for academic or advanced training courses in international banking and finance. It can be used as a source of authoritative information on the frontiers of international banking research.

Finance and Growth

Finance and Growth PDF Author: Ross Levine
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Economic development
Languages : en
Pages : 130

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Book Description
"This paper reviews, appraises, and critiques theoretical and empirical research on the connections between the operation of the financial system and economic growth. While subject to ample qualifications and countervailing views, the preponderance of evidence suggests that both financial intermediaries and markets matter for growth and that reverse causality alone is not driving this relationship. Furthermore, theory and evidence imply that better developed financial systems ease external financing constraints facing firms, which illuminates one mechanism through which financial development influences economic growth. The paper highlights many areas needing additional research"--NBER website