Unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks: Evidence from African stock markets

This paper examines whether stock prices for fourteen African countries are affected by transitory or permanent shocks. This study answers whether Africa stock market indices are mean-reverting or random-walk in the presence of multiple structural breaks. To investigate African equity price behavior...

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Main Author: Osarumwense Osabuohien-Irabor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Islam Indonesia 2020-10-01
Series:Economic Journal of Emerging Markets
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.uii.ac.id/JEP/article/view/16408
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spelling doaj-a909bb854df14774991a447d48fbaedf2021-02-05T09:41:43ZengUniversitas Islam IndonesiaEconomic Journal of Emerging Markets2086-31282502-180X2020-10-0112211913710.20885/ejem.vol12.iss2.art19988Unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks: Evidence from African stock marketsOsarumwense Osabuohien-Irabor0Department of International Economics, School of Economics and Management, Ural Federal University, Yekaterinburg, Sverdlovsk Oblast, Russia.This paper examines whether stock prices for fourteen African countries are affected by transitory or permanent shocks. This study answers whether Africa stock market indices are mean-reverting or random-walk in the presence of multiple structural breaks. To investigate African equity price behavior, we considered one and two endogenously determined structural break tests of Zivot and Andrews (1992) and Lumsdaine and Papell (1997), respectively. Findings/Originality: Our results show that almost all African equity price indices follow the random walk processes except for Senegal and Botswana, which exhibit mean-reversion properties in its equity prices. It implies that investors in African stock markets cannot rely on past information and behavior to predict stock market movements or develop their trading strategies. The result also confirms that the Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) unit root test is not applicable in the presence of structural breaks in African stock markets.https://journal.uii.ac.id/JEP/article/view/16408african stocks, structural breaks, mean-reversion, random-walk, unit root test
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Osarumwense Osabuohien-Irabor
spellingShingle Osarumwense Osabuohien-Irabor
Unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks: Evidence from African stock markets
Economic Journal of Emerging Markets
african stocks, structural breaks, mean-reversion, random-walk, unit root test
author_facet Osarumwense Osabuohien-Irabor
author_sort Osarumwense Osabuohien-Irabor
title Unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks: Evidence from African stock markets
title_short Unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks: Evidence from African stock markets
title_full Unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks: Evidence from African stock markets
title_fullStr Unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks: Evidence from African stock markets
title_full_unstemmed Unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks: Evidence from African stock markets
title_sort unit root tests in the presence of structural breaks: evidence from african stock markets
publisher Universitas Islam Indonesia
series Economic Journal of Emerging Markets
issn 2086-3128
2502-180X
publishDate 2020-10-01
description This paper examines whether stock prices for fourteen African countries are affected by transitory or permanent shocks. This study answers whether Africa stock market indices are mean-reverting or random-walk in the presence of multiple structural breaks. To investigate African equity price behavior, we considered one and two endogenously determined structural break tests of Zivot and Andrews (1992) and Lumsdaine and Papell (1997), respectively. Findings/Originality: Our results show that almost all African equity price indices follow the random walk processes except for Senegal and Botswana, which exhibit mean-reversion properties in its equity prices. It implies that investors in African stock markets cannot rely on past information and behavior to predict stock market movements or develop their trading strategies. The result also confirms that the Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) unit root test is not applicable in the presence of structural breaks in African stock markets.
topic african stocks, structural breaks, mean-reversion, random-walk, unit root test
url https://journal.uii.ac.id/JEP/article/view/16408
work_keys_str_mv AT osarumwenseosabuohienirabor unitroottestsinthepresenceofstructuralbreaksevidencefromafricanstockmarkets
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