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Issue title: Fuzzy systems and applications in innovation and sustainability
Guest editors: Ernesto Leon-Castro, Fabio Blanco-Mesa, Victor Alfaro-Garcia, Anna M. Gil-Lafuente and Jose M. Merigo
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Arenas, Laura; * | Gil-Lafuente, Anna María
Affiliations: Department of Business Administration, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author. Laura Arenas. E-mail: laura.arenas.dreger@gmail.com.
Note: [1] This study is the extension of a presentation made by authors at the International Workshop “Innovation, Complexity and Uncertainty in Economics and Business”, held at Royal Academy of Economic and Financial Sciences, 14th November 2019, Barcelona, Spain.
Abstract: The empirical evidence suggests that stock returns in the emerging technology environment exhibit high stock return volatility. The fundamental aim of the article is to investigate the dynamic, time series properties of the correlations between daily log returns and magnitude of the volatility transmissions from the emerging technologies environment to the Spanish banking sector, the Spanish market portfolio and the finance industry in the EU area. Using daily log returns for the performance variables and an equally weighted index was constructed as proxy to represent the emerging technology phenomena covering a period from the 7th of July of 2015 to the 20th of September of 2019. The study applies generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity GARCH followed by the diagonal BEKK approach. One key finding is that the emerging technology environment is important in capturing volatility of Spanish banking sector, the Spanish market portfolio and the finance industry in the EU area through significant volatility clustering, volatility spillover and volatility persistence. Results exhibit very large GARCH and relatively low ARCH effects indicating a long persistence of resulting shocks over volatility. Broadly, the Spanish banking sector seems to be the most exposed to volatility spillover. Nevertheless, it is the finance industry across the EU which is more affected by the volatility persistence from emerging technology shocks in terms of volatility and cross – volatility point of view. Additionally, high volatility periods provide insights about an increased integration and volatility spillover. From an investor perspective, one important implication is that adding stocks from different emerging technologies to a portfolio does not necessarily lead to risk reduction.
Keywords: Emerging technologies, volatility spillovers, volatility persistence, GARCH, multivariate GARCH
DOI: 10.3233/JIFS-189195
Journal: Journal of Intelligent & Fuzzy Systems, vol. 40, no. 2, pp. 1903-1919, 2021
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