4.7 Article

Spillover effects and nonlinear correlations between carbon emissions and stock markets: An empirical analysis of China's carbon-intensive industries

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 111, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2022.106071

Keywords

Multifractality cross-correlation analysis; Carbon emission market; Stock returns; Spillover effect

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71871146, 72174124]
  2. National Social Science Fundation of China [21BJL132]
  3. Guangdong Special Support Program for Young Top-notch Talent in Science and Technology Innovation [2019TQ05L989]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province [2021A1515011777, 2018A030310370]
  5. Research Platforms and Project in Ordinary Universities of Education Department of Guangdong Province [2020WTSCX079]
  6. MOE (Ministry of Education in China) Project of Humanities and Social Science [18YJA630090, 19YJC790163]
  7. Shenzhen Science and Technology Program [JCYJ20210324093414039]
  8. NTUT-SZU Joint Research Program [2022001]

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This study analyzes the correlations between carbon emissions and related industry stock markets in China. The study finds that the carbon emission trading market is more volatile and inefficient than the stock market, and the level of intervention by government authority and the allowance allocation method affect the magnitude and direction of the correlations.
This study analyzes the correlations between carbon emissions and related industry stock markets in China. We propose a carbon-intensive industry index firstly. According to the Spillover Index, the two markets interact and the carbon-intensive stock market acts as an information receiver in most cases. We apply the Multifractal Cross Correlation Analysis, Detrended Cross-Correlation Coefficient, and the modified Time-lagged Detrended Cross Correlation to characterize the nonlinear correlations between carbon allowance price returns and the stock returns of carbon-intensive industries. The carbon emission trading market is found to be more volatile and inefficient than the stock market; the properties of the carbon trading pilot explain the direction and magnitude of the nonlinear correlations. The level of intervention by the government authority affects the magnitude of correlations; the strongest dynamic return spillovers and the most persistent time-lag cross-correlations were observed in the Shenzhen pilot-the most market-oriented carbon emission trading pilot in China. The allowance allocation method plays an important role in deciding the direction of the nonlinear correlations. Our empirical results show the stock returns of carbon-intensive industries and the carbon allowance price returns were positively cross-correlated in Shenzhen and Shanghai pilots, while the cross-correlations were negative in Beijing, Guangdong, and Hubei pilots.

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