1. The GCC's regional roller coaster: Do regional factors affect stock market dynamics in the GCC Region? Evidence from non-parametric quantile regression
- Author
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Şakir Görmüş, Murat Guven, Amal Essayem, and Essayem A., GÖRMÜŞ Ş., Guven M.
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Social Sciences and Humanities ,Social Sciences (SOC) ,Economics ,Sosyal Bilimler ve Beşeri Bilimler ,Regional factors ,Ekonomi ve Ekonometri ,Sosyal ve Beşeri Bilimler ,Social Sciences & Humanities ,GCC ,Çalışma Ekonomisi ve Endüstri ilişkileri ,EKONOMİ ,General Environmental Science ,Finans ,Geopolitical risk ,Stock return ,İktisat ,Labor Economics and Industrial Relations ,Çalışma Ekonomisi ,Labor Economics ,Ekonomi ve İş ,ECONOMICS & BUSINESS ,Quantile regression ,Sosyal Bilimler (SOC) ,İŞ FİNANSI ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,BUSINESS, FINANCE ,Finance - Abstract
This paper investigates the impact of regional factors on Islamic and conventional stock returns in the member countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) from April 2011 to April 2021. This paper employs the quantile regression method to determine the effect of regional factors on GCC markets during different market states, enabling a more detailed investigation of the structure and degree of dependence. Regional stock market returns and regional political risk are used to study the effect of regional factors. The findings of this study reveal that the reaction of market returns to regional factors is heterogeneous across the conditional distribution of the GCC\"s stock returns. More specifically, the results demonstrate that changes in regional factors, with respect to Islamic and conventional markets, have asymmetric effects on stock returns in the majority of the GCC markets. Except in Qatar, the regional geopolitical risk negatively affects the GCC\"s Islamic stock returns during bearish markets. Results for conventional stock returns have the same negative effect, yet only in extreme market states. As for the impact of the regional stock market, we find that the regional Islamic index has a positive impact across almost all quantiles with a stronger effect during bullish markets, except in Bahrain and Oman. As for conventional markets, we observe the same impact throughout the GCC except for in Saudi Arabia. Islamic and conventional markets\" responses to changes in regional factors have similar behavior. Therefore, we conclude that, despite fundamental differences, Islamic and conventional stock markets in the GCC perform comparably, implying that a potential portfolio diversification benefit is not achieved except in limited cases.
- Published
- 2023
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