The hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks in a post-financial crisis era

Purpose—The purpose of this paper is to examine the transmission mechanisms and dynamic spillover effects between gold spot prices and US equity prices following the 2007 Global Financial Crisis. It also aims at estimating hedging effectiveness between stocks and gold in major US financial market. D...

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Main Authors: Najib Shrydeh, Mohammed Shahateet, Suleiman Mohammad, Mohammed Sumadi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Cogent Economics & Finance
Subjects:
var
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2019.1698268
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spelling doaj-135588c2ba474153b7be5aa75417b1272021-02-18T13:53:27ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Economics & Finance2332-20392019-01-017110.1080/23322039.2019.16982681698268The hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks in a post-financial crisis eraNajib Shrydeh0Mohammed Shahateet1Suleiman Mohammad2Mohammed Sumadi3Princess Sumaya University for TechnologyPrincess Sumaya University for TechnologyPrincess Sumaya University for TechnologyPrincess Sumaya University for TechnologyPurpose—The purpose of this paper is to examine the transmission mechanisms and dynamic spillover effects between gold spot prices and US equity prices following the 2007 Global Financial Crisis. It also aims at estimating hedging effectiveness between stocks and gold in major US financial market. Design/methodology/approach—There is large agreement in the literature that gold exhibits the main requirements to qualify as a risk-mitigating instrument against changes in stock prices and other market variables. To test the validity of this conception, this study applies a VAR-ADCC-BVGARCH model for 2,870 daily observations of US financial market during 2007–2017. Findings—The results suggest that the hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks tends to diminish as stock market capitalization increases, implying that a marginal level of risk exposure is mitigated considering the relatively high proportion of funds that need to be invested in gold against stocks. Originality/value—The real economy is heavily influenced by financial markets, the implications of which are imperative for investors, policy makers and portfolio managers. The key findings of this study are critical in formulating optimal hedging strategies.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2019.1698268us equity marketgold marketvolatility spillover and transmissionhedgingvaradccbvgarch
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Najib Shrydeh
Mohammed Shahateet
Suleiman Mohammad
Mohammed Sumadi
spellingShingle Najib Shrydeh
Mohammed Shahateet
Suleiman Mohammad
Mohammed Sumadi
The hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks in a post-financial crisis era
Cogent Economics & Finance
us equity market
gold market
volatility spillover and transmission
hedging
var
adcc
bvgarch
author_facet Najib Shrydeh
Mohammed Shahateet
Suleiman Mohammad
Mohammed Sumadi
author_sort Najib Shrydeh
title The hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks in a post-financial crisis era
title_short The hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks in a post-financial crisis era
title_full The hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks in a post-financial crisis era
title_fullStr The hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks in a post-financial crisis era
title_full_unstemmed The hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks in a post-financial crisis era
title_sort hedging effectiveness of gold against us stocks in a post-financial crisis era
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Economics & Finance
issn 2332-2039
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Purpose—The purpose of this paper is to examine the transmission mechanisms and dynamic spillover effects between gold spot prices and US equity prices following the 2007 Global Financial Crisis. It also aims at estimating hedging effectiveness between stocks and gold in major US financial market. Design/methodology/approach—There is large agreement in the literature that gold exhibits the main requirements to qualify as a risk-mitigating instrument against changes in stock prices and other market variables. To test the validity of this conception, this study applies a VAR-ADCC-BVGARCH model for 2,870 daily observations of US financial market during 2007–2017. Findings—The results suggest that the hedging effectiveness of gold against US stocks tends to diminish as stock market capitalization increases, implying that a marginal level of risk exposure is mitigated considering the relatively high proportion of funds that need to be invested in gold against stocks. Originality/value—The real economy is heavily influenced by financial markets, the implications of which are imperative for investors, policy makers and portfolio managers. The key findings of this study are critical in formulating optimal hedging strategies.
topic us equity market
gold market
volatility spillover and transmission
hedging
var
adcc
bvgarch
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2019.1698268
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