Global Business and Financial Cycles: A Tale of Two Capital Account Regimes

37 Pages Posted: 21 Sep 2020

See all articles by Julien Acalin

Julien Acalin

Johns Hopkins University

Alessandro Rebucci

Johns Hopkins University - Carey Business School; Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR); National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); National University of Singapore (NUS) - Asian Bureau of Finance and Economic Research (ABFER)

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Date Written: August 10, 2020

Abstract

Using a new equity price-based measure of the global financial cycle, this paper evaluates the relative importance of global financial shocks for quarterly equity returns and output growths in a large sample of advanced and emerging economies, as well as in South Korea and China — two countries on different sides of the trilemma triangle of international finance. We document that global financial shocks in both China and South Korea explain a substantial share of equity return variability (20 and 50 percent of total variance, respectively), but a much smaller portion of real output fluctuations (less than 10 percent in Korea and negligible in the case of China). We also find that the combination of a closer capital account and a more rigid exchange rate regime, as in China, is associated with some costs in terms of diversification opportunities quantified by very large exposures to domestic financial and real shocks, dwarfing the contribution of any other shock in the model. More surprisingly, the combination of a relatively open capital account and a flexible exchange rate, as in South Korea, not only is associated with a higher exposure to the global financial cycle than in China but also with a significant incidence of domestic financial shocks on output fluctuations.

Keywords: Business Cycles, Equity Returns, Global Financial Cycle, Factor-Models, Panel VARs, China, South Korea

JEL Classification: C38, E44, F44, G15

Suggested Citation

Acalin, Julien and Rebucci, Alessandro, Global Business and Financial Cycles: A Tale of Two Capital Account Regimes (August 10, 2020). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3669038 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3669038

Julien Acalin

Johns Hopkins University ( email )

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Alessandro Rebucci (Contact Author)

Johns Hopkins University - Carey Business School ( email )

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National University of Singapore (NUS) - Asian Bureau of Finance and Economic Research (ABFER) ( email )

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