Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Country Risk and the Currency Contagion Effect


Affiliations
1 University of San Francisco McLaren School of Business San Francisco, CA 94117
2 University of San Francisco Department of Economics San Francisco, CA 94117
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


Contagion effects are generally thought to operate through changes in related country exchange rates. In the case of a country with a currency board, however, contagion cannot manifest itself through exchange rate changes. Instead, contagion effects of exchange rate panics in related countries should affect the beta measure of a country's risk. In this paper we examine the time variation of the beta for Argentina, a country with a currency board. Our findings indicate that exchange rate surprises of "peer countries" Brazil and Mexico, not Argentine macro variables, are the only variables that matter for variations in Argentina's beta. Thus contagion appears to be a prime determinant of changes in Argentina's country risk.

Keywords

Country Beta, Currency Crises, Risk Modeling, Contagion
User
Notifications

  • Abell, J., and Krueger, T. (1989), Macroeconomic Influences on Beta, Journal of Economics and Business 41: 185-193.
  • Bekaert, Geert, and Harvey, Campbell R. (1995), Time-Varying World Market Integration, Journal of Finance 50(2): 403-441.
  • Bekaert, G., Harvey, C.R., and Lumsdaine, R.L. (2001), Dating the Integration of World Equity Markets, Working Paper, Stanford University, Duke University, and Brown University.
  • Braun, Phillip, Daniel Nelson, and Alain Sunier (1995), Good News, Bad News, Volatility And Betas, Journal of Finance 50: 1575-1604.
  • Chen, Nai-Fu, Richard Roll, And Stephen A. Ross (1986), Economic Forces and the Stock Market, Journal of Business 59: 383-403.
  • B. Eichengreen and A. Rose (2000), The Empirics of Currency and Banking Crises.
  • B. Eichengreen and A. Rose (2000), Contagious Currency Crises: Channels of Conveyance, in Ito and Krueger (eds), Changes in Exchange Rates in Developing Countries, University of Chicago Press for NBER.
  • B. Eichengreen, A. Rose, C. Wyplosz (1996), Contagious Currency Crises, NBER Working Paper 5681.
  • B. Eichengreen, A. Rose, C. Wyplosz (1999), Contagious Currency Crises: First Tests, Scandinavian Journal of Economics 98: 463-484.
  • Elton, Edwin J., Martin J. Gruber, and Christopher R. Blake (1995), Fundamental Economic Variables, Expected Returns and Bond Fund Performance, Journal of Finance 50: 1229-1256.
  • Erb C., Harvey, C. and Viskanta, T. (1994), Forecasting International Equity Correlations, Financial Analysts Journal November- December: 32-45.
  • Erb, C. B., Harvey, C., and Viskanta, T. (1996a), Political Risk, Economic Risk And Financial Risk, Financial Analysts Journal 52: 28-46.
  • Erb, C. B., Harvey C. R., and Viskanta, T. E. (1996b), Expected Returns and Volatility in 135 Countries, Journal of Portfolio Management Spring: 46-58.
  • Fama, Eugene F. (1990), Stock Returns, Expected Returns, And Real Activity, Journal of Finance 45: 1089-1108.
  • Fama, Eugene F., and Kenneth R. French (1993), Common Risk Factors in the Returns on Stocks and Bonds, Journal of Financial Economics 33: 3-56.
  • Ferson, Wayne E., and Campbell R. Harvey (1991), The Variation Of Economic Risk Premiums, Journal of Political Economy 99: 385-415.
  • Ferson, Wayne E., and Campbell R. Harvey (1993), The Risk and Predictability of International Equity Returns, Review of Financial Studies 6: 527-566.
  • Ferson, Wayne E., and Campbell R. Harvey (1999), Conditioning variables and the Cross Section of Stock Returns, Journal of Finance 54(4): 1325-1359.
  • Ferson, Wayne, and Robert Korajczyk (1994a), Sources Of Risk And Expected Returns In Global Equity Markets, Journal of Banking and Finance 18: 775-803.
  • Ferson, Wayne, and Robert Korajczyk (1995), Do Arbitrage Pricing Models Explain The Predictability of Stock Returns?, Journal of Business 68: 309-349.
  • Gangemi, A.M., Robert D. Brooks and Robert W. Faff (2000), Modeling Australia's Country Risk: A Country Beta Approach, Journal of Economics and Business 252: 259-276.
  • R. Glick and A. Rose (2000), Contagion and Trade: Why are Currency Crises Regional?, FRB-SF Working Paper.
  • Goldberg C.S. and Francisco Delgado (2001), Integration of Emerging Markets: An Analysis of Individual Stocks, Working Paper.
  • Goldberg C.S. and John M. Veitch (2001), Mexico's Tequila Crisis - Hangover or Hair of the Dog? Country Risk and Exchange Rate Regimes, Working Paper.
  • Ghysels, Eric (1993), A Time Series Model with Periodic Stochastic Regime Switches, Working Paper, University of Montreal.
  • Groenewold, N., and Fraser, P. (1997), Share Prices and Macro Economic Factors, Journal of Business Finance and Accounting 24: 1367-1383.
  • Harvey, Campbell R. (1989), Time Varying Conditional Covariances in Tests of Asset Pricing Models, Journal of Financial Economics 24: 289-318.
  • Harvey, Campbell R. (1991), The World Price of Covariance Risk, Journal of Finance 46(1): 111-157.
  • Lehmann, Bruce N., and David M. Modest (1988), The Empirical Foundations of the Arbitrage Pricing Theory, Journal of Financial Economics 21: 213-254.
  • Naranjo, A., and Protopapadakis, A. (1997), Financial Market Integration Tests: An Investigation using US Equity Markets, Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions And Money 7: 93-135.
  • Obstfeld, Maurice (1994), Risk Taking, Global Diversification and Growth, American Economic Review 84: 1310-1329.
  • Shanken, Jay (1990), Intertemporal Asset Pricing: An Empirical Investigation, Journal of Econometrics 45: 99-120.
  • Shanken, Jay (1992), On the Estimation of Beta Pricing Models, Review of Financial Studies 5: 1-34.
  • Sharpe, William. F. (1964), Capital Asset Prices: A Theory of Market Equilibrium Under Conditions Of Risk, Journal of Finance 19: 425-442.
  • Singh, R.A, (1993), Response of Stock Prices to Money Supply Announcements: Australian Evidence, Accounting and Finance 33: 43-60.
  • Singh, R.A, (1995), Response of Financial Markets to Announcements of the Australian Current Account Balance, Accounting and Finance 35: 155-174.
  • Solnik, Bruno (1983), International Arbitrage Pricing Theory, Journal of Finance 38: 449-457.

Abstract Views: 375

PDF Views: 1




  • Country Risk and the Currency Contagion Effect

Abstract Views: 375  |  PDF Views: 1

Authors

Cathy S. Goldberg
University of San Francisco McLaren School of Business San Francisco, CA 94117
John M. Veitch
University of San Francisco Department of Economics San Francisco, CA 94117

Abstract


Contagion effects are generally thought to operate through changes in related country exchange rates. In the case of a country with a currency board, however, contagion cannot manifest itself through exchange rate changes. Instead, contagion effects of exchange rate panics in related countries should affect the beta measure of a country's risk. In this paper we examine the time variation of the beta for Argentina, a country with a currency board. Our findings indicate that exchange rate surprises of "peer countries" Brazil and Mexico, not Argentine macro variables, are the only variables that matter for variations in Argentina's beta. Thus contagion appears to be a prime determinant of changes in Argentina's country risk.

Keywords


Country Beta, Currency Crises, Risk Modeling, Contagion

References