Volatility transmission across South African financial markets: does the bull "“ bear distinction matter?

dc.contributor.advisorChinzara, Zivanemoyo
dc.contributor.authorJaramba, Toddy
dc.date.accessioned2026-02-09T10:28:11Z
dc.date.issued2011
dc.description.abstractThe volatility transmission in financial markets has important implications for investment decision making, portfolio diversification and overall macroeconomic stability. This paper analyses volatility transmission across four South African financial markets that is the stock, bond, money and foreign exchange markets, using daily data for the period 2000-2010. It also shows whether the volatilities in the SA financial markets present a different behaviour in bull and bear market phases. The effects of the international markets volatility to the local markets volatility was also looked at in this study. To obtain estimates of market volatility, the study experimented with various volatility models that include the GARCH, EGARCH and TARCH. To examine volatility interaction and the transmission of volatility shocks, a VAR model was estimated together with block exogeneity, impulse response and variance decomposition. The study found that there is limited volatility transmission across the SA financial markets. The study also found that the money market is the most exogenous of all markets since the other three financial markets volatility is insignificant to the money market (see impulse response results). For the bond market, volatility transmission was characterized with a decreasing trend. With regard to international markets volatility, it concluded that, the shocks in the international markets will eventually affect the movement in the local markets. The results also highlighted that, world and local markets are important in accelerating the volatility transmission in SA financial markets depending on whether they are in their bull or bear phases. In the case of South Africa, the study found that volatility transmission across markets is higher during bear market periods than bull market periods. Basing on the study results which show that the volatility transmission is limited across SA financial markets, the implication to local and international investors is that there is a greater potential for diversifying risk by investing in different South African financial markets.
dc.description.degreeMaster's thesis
dc.description.degreeMCom
dc.format.extent96 pages
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.urihttps://researchrepository.ru.ac.za/handle/123456789/1296
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherRhodes University, Faculty of Commerce, Department of Economics and Economic History
dc.rightsJaramba, Toddy
dc.subjectFinance -- South Africa
dc.subjectFinancial institutions -- South Africa
dc.subjectMonetary policy -- South Africa
dc.subjectPortfolio management -- South Africa
dc.subjectStock exchanges -- South Africa
dc.subjectForeign exchange -- Mathematical models
dc.subjectBond market -- South Africa
dc.titleVolatility transmission across South African financial markets: does the bull "“ bear distinction matter?
dc.typeAcademic thesis

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