Shadow banking participation and stock market crash risk: evidence from China

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Qian Cao ◽  
Bing Ma ◽  
Yanqi Zhu
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Ping Zhang ◽  
Jieying Gao ◽  
Yanbin Zhang ◽  
Te-Wei Wang

Due to the increasing linkage of China and the US stock markets today, we constructed a TVP-VAR model to study the dynamic spillover effects between the US stock volatility and China’s stock market crash risk. We found dynamic spillover effects are constantly strengthening between US stock volatility and China’s stock market crash risk: when the US stock volatility increases, China’s stock market crash risk increases. In addition, the gradual improvement of financial market openness in China, the short-term capital outflow from China, and the depreciation of the RMB exchange rate will increase China’s stock market crash risk. And, the impacts of short-term capital outflow from China are more significant. Further, the increase in China’s stock market crash risk will lead to the decline of the US stock volatility, which may be due to the flight to quality.


2021 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
pp. 101419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhifeng Liu ◽  
Toan Luu Duc Huynh ◽  
Peng-Fei Dai

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng-Fei Dai ◽  
Xiong Xiong ◽  
Zhifeng Liu ◽  
Toan Luu Duc Huynh ◽  
Jianjun Sun

AbstractThis paper investigates the impact of economic policy uncertainty (EPU) on the crash risk of US stock market during the COVID-19 pandemic. To this end, we use the GARCH-S (GARCH with skewness) model to estimate daily skewness as a proxy for the stock market crash risk. The empirical results show the significantly negative correlation between EPU and stock market crash risk, indicating the aggravation of EPU increase the crash risk. Moreover, the negative correlation gets stronger after the global COVID-19 outbreak, which shows the crash risk of the US stock market will be more affected by EPU during the epidemic.


2007 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 434-449
Author(s):  
Albert Waldinger

Abstract This article evaluates the function of Yiddish-Hebrew creative diglossia in the work of Yosl Birshteyn, a prominent Israeli novelist and short-story writer, particularly in the “first Kibbutz novel” in Yiddish, Hebrew-Yiddish fiction based on the Israeli stock market crash, and the future of Yiddishism in Hebrew and Yiddish. In short, Yiddish acts as a layer of all texts as a fact of communal pain and uncertainty in past, present and future. Birshteyn’s Hebrew originals were translated back into Yiddish and his Yiddish work was translated into Hebrew by famous and representative hands with stylistic and linguistic consequences examined here.


2021 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 053115
Author(s):  
Ajit Mahata ◽  
Anish Rai ◽  
Md. Nurujjaman ◽  
Om Prakash ◽  
Debi Prasad Bal

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