4.6 Article

Crude oil shocks and African stock markets

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DOI: 10.1016/j.ribaf.2020.101346

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Smooth transition regression; Oil-exporting countries; Oil-importing countries; Oil-market shocks; African stock returns

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This study investigates the impact of crude oil shocks on African stock markets using a Structural Vector Autoregressive model and a two-state regime smooth transition regression framework. The findings suggest that global demand shock is not significant for oil-importing countries, and there is little evidence that oil supply shock affects real stock return. The study also finds that oil-specific shock has a significant impact on most countries investigated.
In this paper, we investigate the impact of crude oil shocks on selected African stock markets using a Structural Vector Autoregressive model and a two-state regime smooth transition regression framework on monthly data from January 2000 to July 2018. The study is timely given the fast-growing energy sector and stock markets in Africa as well as the place of Africa in international trade. Selected markets are classified into oil-exporting (Nigeria, Tunisia, and Egypt) and oil-importing (Botswana, South Africa, Kenya, and Mauritius). The key findings are as follows: global demand shock does not really matter in oil-importing countries; there is little evidence that oil supply shock affects the real stock return for oil-exporting and oil-importing countries; oil-specific shock is significant for most countries investigated; negative price shocks have more impact than positive price shocks. The findings from this study have important implications for investors whose portfolios may comprise of assets from African stock markets and crude oil. Given the importance of oil in the global market, one would typically avoid equities that suffer from its shock. This study provides the indicators to inform that decision.Y

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