We explore the possible existence and behavior of hot money in six categories of disaggregated bilateral capital flows (equity inflows, equity outflows, bond inflows, bond outflows, banking credit inflows, and banking credit outflows) for 12 emerging markets vis-à-vis the US from 1995 to 2012 and provides several new findings. First, we identify the existence of hot money in all six categories above and conclude that both gross inflows and gross outflows can be the sources of hot money. Second, hot money in equity inflows (outflows) engages in positive (negative) feedback trading regarding local stock market returns. Third, some categories of hot money have a temporary influence on local stock market returns while the others have a permanen...
We investigate the long-run relations and equilibrium correction mechanisms between gross capital in...
This paper analyzes the dynamics of gross capital flows since the 1990s across three regions, i.e. E...
We investigate whether some types of capital flows are more likely to reverse than others during cur...
This paper investigates the relative importance of hot money in bank credit and portfolio flows from...
This paper investigates the relative importance of hot money in bank credit and portfolio flows from...
53 p.The issue of hot money flows was first brought to the limelight during the Asian financial cris...
Using maximum likelihood Kalman filtering techniques and non-parametric variance ratio statistics, w...
Has the unprecedented financial globalization of recent years changed the behavior of capital flows ...
This paper investigates the link between hot money and business cycle volatility in China from Janua...
This paper examines the effect of cross-border capital flows on financial markets by focusing on the...
Private capital flow to emerging market economies increased substantially during the 1990s. Concurre...
This paper analyzes the effects on firms of sovereign debt inflows in emerging countries. To deal wi...
© 2021 Elsevier B.V.We investigate the long-run relations and equilibrium correction mechanisms betw...
The standard pattern: capital flows into the new “hot” nation, but then stop or reverses forcing pai...
We investigate bubble-like dynamics in 22 Emerging Market Economies (EMEs). We identify the existenc...
We investigate the long-run relations and equilibrium correction mechanisms between gross capital in...
This paper analyzes the dynamics of gross capital flows since the 1990s across three regions, i.e. E...
We investigate whether some types of capital flows are more likely to reverse than others during cur...
This paper investigates the relative importance of hot money in bank credit and portfolio flows from...
This paper investigates the relative importance of hot money in bank credit and portfolio flows from...
53 p.The issue of hot money flows was first brought to the limelight during the Asian financial cris...
Using maximum likelihood Kalman filtering techniques and non-parametric variance ratio statistics, w...
Has the unprecedented financial globalization of recent years changed the behavior of capital flows ...
This paper investigates the link between hot money and business cycle volatility in China from Janua...
This paper examines the effect of cross-border capital flows on financial markets by focusing on the...
Private capital flow to emerging market economies increased substantially during the 1990s. Concurre...
This paper analyzes the effects on firms of sovereign debt inflows in emerging countries. To deal wi...
© 2021 Elsevier B.V.We investigate the long-run relations and equilibrium correction mechanisms betw...
The standard pattern: capital flows into the new “hot” nation, but then stop or reverses forcing pai...
We investigate bubble-like dynamics in 22 Emerging Market Economies (EMEs). We identify the existenc...
We investigate the long-run relations and equilibrium correction mechanisms between gross capital in...
This paper analyzes the dynamics of gross capital flows since the 1990s across three regions, i.e. E...
We investigate whether some types of capital flows are more likely to reverse than others during cur...