No. 408 - Correlation Analysis of Financial Contagion: What One Should Know before Running a Test

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by G. Corsetti, M. Pericoli and M. SbraciaJune 2001

This paper presents a general test of contagion in financial markets based on bivariate correlation analysis – a test that can be interpreted as an extension of the normal correlation theorem. Contagion is defined as a structural break in the data generating process of rates of return. Using a factor model of returns, our theoretical framework nests leading contributions in the literature as special cases. We show that the tests proposed in the literature are conditional on a specific yet arbitrary assumption about the variance of country specific shocks. Using the Hong Kong stock market crisis in October 1997 as a representative case study, our results suggest that, for a number of pairs of country stock markets, the hypothesis of ‘no contagion’ can be rejected only if the variance of country specific shocks is set to levels that are not consistent with the evidence.

Published in 2005 in: Journal of International Money and Finance, v. 24, 8, pp. 1177-1199