Niloufar Sadat Hosseinioun; Mehdi Behname; Taghi Ebrahimi Salari
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to study volatility spillovers among stock, gold and exchange rate markets. A “VAR–MGARCH” model was applied for Iranian financial markets for the period of March 21, 2011 to September 22, 2014. The data used are daily price of Bahar Azadi Coin, Tehran price ...
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The aim of this paper is to study volatility spillovers among stock, gold and exchange rate markets. A “VAR–MGARCH” model was applied for Iranian financial markets for the period of March 21, 2011 to September 22, 2014. The data used are daily price of Bahar Azadi Coin, Tehran price stock index and nominal exchange rate (Dollar in terms of Rials).The results indicate that there are bidirectional shock transitions between gold and exchange markets and between gold and stock markets and there is a unidirectional shock transition from stock market to exchange market. Also, the results show that there are bidirectional volatility transitions between exchange and gold markets and gold and stock markets.
Majid Sameti; Bahareh Teimouri
Volume 17, Issue 50 , April 2012, , Pages 99-137
Abstract
We employ the modelling strategy of Garratt, Lee, Pesaran and Shin (2003a) to estimate a structural cointegrating VARX* model for Iran in which core macroeconomic variables of the Iranian economy are related to current and lagged values of a number of key foreign variables. The long run macroeconomic ...
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We employ the modelling strategy of Garratt, Lee, Pesaran and Shin (2003a) to estimate a structural cointegrating VARX* model for Iran in which core macroeconomic variables of the Iranian economy are related to current and lagged values of a number of key foreign variables. The long run macroeconomic relations for real money balances, interest rates, output, prices and exchange rates are identified and tested within this framework over the period 1979Q1-2007Q4. We make use of generalised impulse response functions to analyze the dynamic properties of the model following a shock to exogenous variables (oil prices and foreign interest rates). We also examine via the persistence profiles, the speed of adjustments to the long run relations following a system-wide shock. The results show that money demand relation and UIP-PPP (international parity conditions jointly) are not rejected within the model. Furthermore, these two long run relations have well-behaved persistence profiles in which the effects of system wide-shocks on the long run relations are transitory and die out eventually. However, both UIP-PPP and the money demand relations exhibit sluggish rates of adjustments to shocks. We also provide evidence for the excessive importance of oil price shocks for Iranian economy in our impulse response analysis.