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Article
Lessons for Euro markets from the first wave of COVID-19
Investment Management and Financial Innovations
  • Costas Siriopoulos, Zayed University
  • Argyro Svingou, Panepistimion Patron
  • Jagadish Dandu, Zayed University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-19-2021
Abstract

Although the coronavirus pandemic hit Europe in the early days of 2020, European stock markets had signaled fluctuations in the days before. This paper assesses the observed volatility on European stock exchanges and searches for its sources during the first four months of 2020. To investigate the issue, a panel VAR model is adopted, and the generalized impulse response function and the variance decomposition methods are used. The estimations show that about 34% of the volatility in European stock markets is due to the Chinese stock market, while 7% is due to international uncertainty, as measured by VIX. The impact of pandemic cases and deaths on European stock markets is negligible, below 1%. This means that the European stock market faced two risk elements: the first is the transmission volatility from the Chinese stock market, and the second is the international uncertainty. The findings also support the view that COVID-19 is more like a systematic risk.

Publisher
LLC CPC Business Perspectives
Disciplines
Keywords
  • Coronavirus,
  • Pandemic,
  • Spillovers,
  • Stock returns,
  • Volatility
Scopus ID
85103521602
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Indexed in Scopus
Yes
Open Access
Yes
Open Access Type
Gold: This publication is openly available in an open access journal/series
Citation Information
Costas Siriopoulos, Argyro Svingou and Jagadish Dandu. "Lessons for Euro markets from the first wave of COVID-19" Investment Management and Financial Innovations Vol. 18 (2021) p. 285 - 298 ISSN: <a href="https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/issn/1810-4967" target="_blank">1810-4967</a>
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/costas-syriopoulos/25/