Emerging Markets Instability: Do Sovereign Ratings Affect Country Risk and Stock Returns?
40 Pages Posted: 25 Jan 2002
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Emerging Markets Instability: Do Sovereign Ratings Affect Country Risk and Stock Returns?
Emerging Markets Instability: Do Sovereign Ratings Affect Country Risk and Stock Returns?
Date Written: January 2002
Abstract
Changes in sovereign ratings affect country risk and stock returns. And these changes are transmitted across countries, with neighbor-country effects being more significant.
Financial market instability has received attention from both academic and policy circles. Rating agencies have been under particular scrutiny lately as promoters of financial excesses, upgrading countries in good times and downgrading them in bad. Using a panel of emerging economies, Kaminsky and Schmukler examine whether sovereign ratings affect financial markets.
The authors find that changes in sovereign ratings affect country risk and stock returns. They also find that these changes are transmitted across countries, with neighbor-country effects being more significant. Rating upgrades tend to follow market rallies; downgrades tend to follow market downturns. Countries with more vulnerable economies, as measured by low ratings, are more sensitive to changes in U.S. interest rates.
This paper - a product of Macroeconomics and Growth, Development Research Group - is part of a larger effort in the group to understand how financial markets work in developing countries. The authors may be contacted at graciela@gwu.edu or sschmukler@worldbank.org.
JEL Classification: F30, G12, G14, G15, G29
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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