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Título
Asymmetric volatility and regional integration: an EGARCH–GJR analysis of Latin American and European equity markets
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Volatility dynamics
Asymmetric GARCH
Half-life
Financial integration
Europe
Latin America
Fecha de publicación
2026
Editor
Emerald
Citación
Dote Pardo, J. S., & Parra-Domínguez, J. (2026). Asymmetric volatility and regional integration: an EGARCH–GJR analysis of Latin American and European equity markets. Journal of Economic Studies, 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1108/jes-10-2025-0793
Resumen
[EN]This study analyzes volatility dynamics and regional financial integration in European and Latin American equity markets under heightened global uncertainty and the growing relevance of sustainable finance.
It aims to assess volatility persistence, asymmetric responses to negative information, and the role of
intraregional integration in shock transmission and financial stability.
Design/methodology/approach – Daily equity index returns from representative European and Latin
American markets over 2010–2025 are analyzed using asymmetric GARCH-type models (EGARCH and GJRGARCH)
with skewed innovations. Volatility persistence is measured through model parameters and half-life
indicators, while financial integration is examined using Dynamic Conditional Correlation (DCC-GARCH)
models. Robustness is evaluated through structural stability tests and pre- and post-COVID-19 comparisons.
Findings – European markets exhibit high volatility persistence but short half-lives (approximately 4–6 days),
indicating faster shock absorption. Latin American markets display longer half-lives (around 8–12 days),
reflecting more persistent volatility. Asymmetric effects are stronger and more systematic in Europe, while Latin
America shows weaker and more heterogeneous responses. Intraregional correlations are extremely high in
Europe, limiting diversification, whereas Latin America remains moderately and unevenly integrated. No
evidence of structural breaks is found.
Originality/value – The study offers a unified long-horizon comparative framework combining asymmetric
GARCH models, half-life measures, dynamic correlations, and stability diagnostics. It provides robust evidence
on structural differences between developed and emerging markets, with implications for investors and
policymakers in financial stability and sustainable finance.
URI
ISSN
0144-3585
DOI
10.1108/JES-10-2025-0793
Versión del editor
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