By employing time-frequency-domain frameworks, this study analyzes the spillover effects of news-based economic uncertainty caused by the pandemic on three renewable energy stock indices in the USA, Europe, and the world. The empirical results reveal that the total spillover from economic uncertainty to the three renewable energy stock returns was concentrated at a high frequency, whereas those to volatilities appeared at low frequencies. Utilizing a rolling-window method, we observed that the impact of uncertainty caused by COVID-19 on three renewable energy stock returns and volatilities is more significant than that resulting from the global financial crisis (GFC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe analyzed the return and volatility spillover between the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the crude oil market, and the stock market by employing two empirical methods for connectedness: the time-domain approach developed by Diebold and Yilmaz (2012) and the method based on frequency dynamics developed by Barunik and Krehlik (2018). We find that the return spillover mainly occurs in the short term; however, the volatility spillover mainly occurs in the long term. From the moving window analysis results, the impact of COVID-19 created an unprecedented level of risk, such as plummeting oil prices and triggering the US stock market circuit breaker four times, which caused investors to suffer heavy losses in a short period.
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