The anatomy of sovereign risk contagion

•Sovereign credit risk first spreads rapidly within regions.•Sovereign credit risks then build up globally via protracted risk spillovers.•Risk spillovers are determined by global and regional risk factors.•Global risk factors are driven by investor risk appetites and debt levels.•Regional risk fact...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of international money and finance 2016-12, Vol.69, p.264-286
Hauptverfasser: Wu, Eliza, Erdem, Magdalena, Kalotychou, Elena, Remolona, Eli
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Sovereign credit risk first spreads rapidly within regions.•Sovereign credit risks then build up globally via protracted risk spillovers.•Risk spillovers are determined by global and regional risk factors.•Global risk factors are driven by investor risk appetites and debt levels.•Regional risk factors depend on economic fundamentals within a region. The channels for the cross-border propagation of sovereign risk in the international sovereign debt market are analysed. Identifying sovereign credit events as extraordinary jumps in CDS spreads, we distinguish between the immediate effects of such events and their longer term spillover effects. To analyse “fast and furious” contagion, we use daily CDS data to conduct event studies around a total of 89 identified credit events in a global country sample. To analyse “slow-burn” spillover effects, we apply a multifactor risk model, distinguishing between global and regional risk factors. We find that “fast and furious” contagion has been primarily a regional phenomenon, whilst “slow-burn” spillover effects can often be global in scope, especially those of the recent European debt crisis. The global risk factors are found to be driven by investor risk appetites and debt levels, whilst the regional factors depend on economic fundamentals of countries within a region.
ISSN:0261-5606
1873-0639
DOI:10.1016/j.jimonfin.2016.07.002