1. The response of stock market volatility to futures-based measures of monetary policy shocks
- Author
-
Nikolay Gospodinov and Ibrahim Jamali
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Leverage (finance) ,Financial economics ,Monetary economics ,Bivariate analysis ,Implied volatility ,Volatility risk premium ,Volatility swap ,Forward volatility ,Economics ,Stock (geology) ,Stochastic volatility ,Stock market bubble ,Monetary policy ,jel:C32 ,jel:E52 ,jel:E58 ,jel:G12 ,jel:C58 ,jel:G10 ,stock market volatility ,federal funds futures ,monetary policy ,variance risk premium ,vector autoregression ,bivariate GARCH ,leverage effect ,volatility feedback effect ,Volatility smile ,Stock market ,Volatility (finance) ,Futures contract ,Finance - Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the dynamic response of stock market volatility to changes in monetary policy. Using a vector autoregressive model, our findings reveal a significant and asymmetric response of stock returns and volatility to monetary policy shocks. Although the increase in the volatility risk premium, futures-trading volume, and leverage appear to contribute to a short-term increase in volatility, the longer-term dynamics of volatility are dominated by monetary policy's effect on fundamentals. The estimation results from a bivariate VAR-GARCH model suggest that the Fed does not respond to the stock market at a high frequency, but they also suggest that market participants' uncertainty regarding the monetary stance affects stock market volatility.
- Published
- 2015
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