The effects of monetary policy response to the Covid-19 crisis on dynamic connectedness across financial markets in Central and Eastern Europe

Objective: This study investigates the effects of monetary policy interventions in Central and Eastern European (CEE) economies on shifts in financial market linkages during the Covid-19-induced crisis. We explore the market reaction to both standard and non-standard (e.g., quantitative easing) mone...

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Veröffentlicht in:Entrepreneurial Business and Economics Review 2023-03, Vol.11 (1), p.7-28
Hauptverfasser: Grabowski, Wojciech, Janus, Jakub, Stawasz-Grabowska, Ewa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: This study investigates the effects of monetary policy interventions in Central and Eastern European (CEE) economies on shifts in financial market linkages during the Covid-19-induced crisis. We explore the market reaction to both standard and non-standard (e.g., quantitative easing) monetary policy announcements by cen- tral banks in Czechia, Hungary, Poland, and Romania, and analyse the way they affected sovereign bond and stock market linkages. The analysis is further extended to include international spill-over effects. Research Design Methods: We first quantify a set of time-varying asset correlations using asymmetric generalised DCC-GARCH models and daily data on financial asset returns. Going beyond the domestic stock-bond interdependencies, we explore cross-border connectedness between CEE economies, Germany, and the US. Next, we investigate the effects of detailed central bank announcements, as they un- folded during the Covid-19 crisis. Findings: We find that, by and large, the CEE central bank interventions conducted in 2020 alleviated domestic and cross-border pressures in financial market linkages triggered by the global risk shock, such as contagion and flight-to-safety effects. However, monetary policies had largest impact at the height of the crisis when central banks in the region introduced substantial interest-rate cuts and unconventional measures, which were used by those banks for the first time or on such a wide scale. Implications Recommendations: Our results imply that monetary authorities may partly mitigate the trans- mission of global shocks to domestic financial markets, even when it comes to small open economies. How- ever, the effects of monetary policies proved strongest at the onset of the crisis and seem to have been related to unconventional policy tools and aggressive interest rate cuts. Contribution Value Added: We examinee linkages across the two largest asset classes, sovereign bonds and equities, both within CEE economies and between each of them and Germany and the US (traditionally perceived as safe havens), while controlling for potential structural breaks, global risk measures, and Covid-19-related indi- cators, such as the number of Covid-19 cases and the government-response stringency indices. Event studies conducted in the article are based on a comprehensive dataset on policy interventions launched during 2020.
ISSN:2353-883X
2353-8821
2353-8821
DOI:10.15678/EBER.2023.110101