On the transmission mechanism of Asia‐Pacific yield curve characteristics

David Gabauer, Sowmya Subramaniam, Rangan Gupta

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This study investigates the transmission mechanism of Asia‐Pacific sovereign bond yields using a monthly data set, which reaches over the period from January 2003 until December 2017. Sovereign bond yields are decomposed into three latent factors – level, curvature and slope – using the dynamic Nelson–Siegel procedure proposed by Diebold and Li, Journal of Econometrics, 2006, 130(2), 337–364. The yield curve propagation mechanism is examined using the dynamic connectedness framework of Diebold and Yılmaz, Journal of Econometrics, 2012, 182(1), 119–134 and Diebold and Yılmaz, Journal of Econometrics, 2014, 182(1), 119–134 which is based on a time‐varying parameter vector auto‐regression (TVP‐VAR). The results suggest that the net transmitters of shocks are Australia, Hong Kong, Korea and Singapore whereas China, India, Indonesia, Japan and Malaysia have been net receivers of shocks. Across factors, those results are consistent except for the Korean curvature factor. In addition, findings revealed that the highest market interconnectedness can be found in the level factor followed by the slope and the curvature factor. Notably, all dynamic connectedness indices strongly increased during the Global Financial Crisis (2009), which illustrates that the Asia‐Pacific monetary policy is interconnected with each other especially during periods of economic unrest.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)473-488
Number of pages16
JournalInternational Journal of Finance and Economics
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Fields of science

  • 101007 Financial mathematics
  • 101018 Statistics
  • 101026 Time series analysis
  • 102037 Visualisation
  • 502025 Econometrics
  • 502051 Economic statistics

JKU Focus areas

  • Transformation in Finance and Financial Institutions

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