Assessing the contagion effect on herding behaviour under segmented and integrated stock markets circumstances in the USA, China, and ASEAN-5

Publons ID18444888
Wos IDWOS:000442111200003
Doi10.21003/ea.V169-03
TitleAssessing the contagion effect on herding behaviour under segmented and integrated stock markets circumstances in the USA, China, and ASEAN-5
First AuthorWahyudi, Sugeng; Najmudin; Laksana, Rio Dhani; Rachmawati, Rina;
Last Author
AuthorsWahyudi, S; Najmudin; Laksana, RD; Rachmawati, R;
Publish DateJUL 19 2018
Journal NameECONOMIC ANNALS-XXI
Citation4
AbstractThis paper investigates the contagion effect of herding behaviour in the US, China, and ASEAN-5 stock markets by considering the level of market integration. We employed individual stocks and market returns on daily basis data during the global financial crisis (GFC) and the recent tranquil periods. The sample observed consists of stocks having higher liquidity and larger market capitalisation in each of the stock markets. We applied the cross-sectional returns dispersion approach and ordinary least squares to achieve the purpose by involving static correlation. During the GFC period, the empirical result provides evidence on the presence of herding transmission from the dominant stock market to other integrated markets bilaterally. Specifically, herding behaviour in a domestic market was affected by herding activity in integrated foreign markets. By contrast, herding behaviour in a domestic market was not affected by herding in segmented foreign markets. Comparing to the recent tranquil period of 2017-2018, the contagion effect appears on the market only during the crisis period. Therefore, market participants should be more conservative in anticipating the emergence of this phenomenon for integrated markets under market crisis circumstances.
Publish TypeJournal
Publish Year2018
Page Begin15
Page End20
Issn1728-6220
Eissn1728-6239
Urlhttps://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000442111200003
AuthorDr. E. NAJMUDIN, S.E., M.Si
File20090.pdf