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Are Islamic indexes a safe haven for investors?: An analysis of total, directional and net volatility spillovers between conventional and Islamic indexes and importance of crisis periods

Are Islamic indexes a safe haven for investors?: An analysis of total, directional and net volatility spillovers between conventional and Islamic indexes and importance of crisis periods
Are Islamic indexes a safe haven for investors?: An analysis of total, directional and net volatility spillovers between conventional and Islamic indexes and importance of crisis periods
We examine the decoupling and contagion hypotheses by testing them on the safe haven status of Islamic indexes through investigating the total, directional and net volatility spillovers across nine regional Islamic stock indexes and their conventional counterparts, using the generalized vector autoregressive framework. We use daily data covering the period 1999 to 2014 which includes various financial crises such as those that took place in Asia, Russia, Argentina, Brazil and the United States. The results show that global financial crises strongly affect the cross-market volatility. Although the contagion hypothesis is evident for both Islamic and conventional indexes, the findings also suggest the presence of a decoupling of the Islamic indexes from their conventional counterparts during turbulent periods. The results provide several useful implications for policy makers and portfolio managers seeking to diversify their portfolios and to hedge market risk, confirming that the Islamic financial indexes are a safe haven for investors during financial crises. Furthermore, paper reports significant time-varying patterns in the volatility spillovers for all the Islamic and conventional stock indexes and points out the stress transmitters and receivers.
islamic indexes, conventional indexes, volatility spillovers, safe haven
0927-538X
124-150
Hkiri, Besma
e3ce3fa3-6367-4d6a-9927-a565075ab3de
Hammoudeh, Shawkat
ace4da65-c72d-4c11-9172-e9ce0c582eef
Aloui, Chaker
83abae9e-6c56-46f0-8f64-bb5c9dc99e28
Yarovaya, Larisa
2bd189e8-3bad-48b0-9d09-5d96a4132889
Hkiri, Besma
e3ce3fa3-6367-4d6a-9927-a565075ab3de
Hammoudeh, Shawkat
ace4da65-c72d-4c11-9172-e9ce0c582eef
Aloui, Chaker
83abae9e-6c56-46f0-8f64-bb5c9dc99e28
Yarovaya, Larisa
2bd189e8-3bad-48b0-9d09-5d96a4132889

Hkiri, Besma, Hammoudeh, Shawkat, Aloui, Chaker and Yarovaya, Larisa (2017) Are Islamic indexes a safe haven for investors?: An analysis of total, directional and net volatility spillovers between conventional and Islamic indexes and importance of crisis periods. Pacific-Basin Finance Journal, 43, 124-150. (doi:10.1016/j.pacfin.2017.03.001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We examine the decoupling and contagion hypotheses by testing them on the safe haven status of Islamic indexes through investigating the total, directional and net volatility spillovers across nine regional Islamic stock indexes and their conventional counterparts, using the generalized vector autoregressive framework. We use daily data covering the period 1999 to 2014 which includes various financial crises such as those that took place in Asia, Russia, Argentina, Brazil and the United States. The results show that global financial crises strongly affect the cross-market volatility. Although the contagion hypothesis is evident for both Islamic and conventional indexes, the findings also suggest the presence of a decoupling of the Islamic indexes from their conventional counterparts during turbulent periods. The results provide several useful implications for policy makers and portfolio managers seeking to diversify their portfolios and to hedge market risk, confirming that the Islamic financial indexes are a safe haven for investors during financial crises. Furthermore, paper reports significant time-varying patterns in the volatility spillovers for all the Islamic and conventional stock indexes and points out the stress transmitters and receivers.

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Are Islamic.2017 (1) - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 March 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 March 2017
Published date: June 2017
Keywords: islamic indexes, conventional indexes, volatility spillovers, safe haven

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 426316
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/426316
ISSN: 0927-538X
PURE UUID: 926587cc-2390-490f-9614-151c55f2f816
ORCID for Larisa Yarovaya: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9638-2917

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Date deposited: 22 Nov 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:18

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Contributors

Author: Besma Hkiri
Author: Shawkat Hammoudeh
Author: Chaker Aloui
Author: Larisa Yarovaya ORCID iD

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