4.5 Article

Do implied volatilities of stock and commodity markets affect conventional & shariah indices differently? An evidence by OVX, GVZ and VIX

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e21094

Keywords

Shariah compliant index; VIX; Crude oil; Volatility spillover

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This study investigates the impact of factors such as oil prices, gold prices, and volatility indices on the returns of indices in the USA, Europe, and Asia. The findings suggest that volatility indices have a greater influence on index returns during the Covid-19 period, which can be attributed to the rapid impact of the pandemic on global economies. Additionally, the study reveals that oil price volatility has a stronger effect on stock prices compared to oil spot prices.
The current study aims to investigate how index returns of conventional and shariah indices of the USA, Europe, and Asia are affected by changes in oil prices, gold prices, VIX, gold-VIX, and oilVIX. In our investigation, we used the S&P 500, S&P Europe 350, S&P Pan Asia, and their relevant shariah counterparts for the USA, Europe, and Asia. To examine how the explanatory factors affect the overall distribution of the explained variables, we used OLS and quantile regression. For the time frame prior to Covid-19, we discover that all volatility indices-OVX, GVZ, and VIX-influence returns of all indices simultaneously, and that all variables-aside from the spot price of oil-have a greater impact during the bear phase according to QR findings. Further, Volatility indices have a greater impact on volatility of index returns during the Covid-19 period. This is largely because the Covid-19 outbreak had a rapid impact on economies all around the world, and the only thing that affected financial markets consistently was high volatility. This is further supported by the findings of BEKK, which demonstrate that volatility extends across all markets and originates from commodities like gold, oil, gold-VIX, and VIX. Evidence for this can be seen in the fact that during the COVID-19 period, stock prices reacted more favorably to oil price volatility than to oil spot prices, which even went negative on April 20, 2020. Because of this, market stability can be promoted by reducing volatility through the prompt dissemination of crucial information, even while governments have little direct control over the prices of significant commodities like gold and crude oil.

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