This study examines financial integration and contagion across South Asia’s emerging and frontier markets during the 2001–2013 period, encompassing both the global financial and Eurozone crises. Employing a multi-factor asset pricing model within an EGARCH framework, we disentangle systematic global exposures from idiosyncratic shocks originating in the U.S. and Eurozone. By formally testing for structural changes in both mean returns and conditional variance, we uncover a striking “integration-contagion paradox.” While frontier markets (Bangladesh, Nepal) appear segmented from global pricing signals in tranquil times, they remain acutely susceptible to second-moment volatility contagion during stress periods. In contrast, India exhibits strong systematic return integration yet remains relatively insulated from volatility cascades. These results challenge the conventional view that financial segmentation offers a robust shield against systemic risk, revealing that a lack of global integration does not immunize markets against the transmission of global uncertainty.
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Dinesh Gajurel
Bibas Thapa
International Journal of Financial Studies
Australian National University
University of New Brunswick
Tribhuvan University
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Gajurel et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d0afde659487ece0fa5f4d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijfs14040086