Gross Capital Flows, Common Factors, and the Global Financial Cycle

This paper assesses the international comovement of gross capital inflows and outflows using a two-level factor model. Among advanced and emerging countries, capital flows exhibit strong commonality: common (global and country group-specific) factors account, on average, for close to half of their variance. There is a contrast across groups: common factors dominate advanced-country capital flows, while idiosyncratic factors dominate emerging- country flows and, especially, developing-country flows. The reason is the much larger role of global factors among advanced countries. Importantly, these findings apply to both inflows and outflows: their respective common factors are very similar -- although global factors play a bigger role for outflows than for inflows. The commonality of flows reflects a global cycle, summarized by a small set of variables (the VIX, the U.S. real interest rate and real exchange rate, U.S. GDP growth, and world commodity prices) that explain much of the variance of the estimated factors -- especially the global factors. Over time, the quantitative role of the common factors exhibits a "globalization" stage up to 2007, during which they acquire growing importance, followed by a phase of "deglobalization" post-crisis. Greater financial openness, deeper financial systems, and more rigid exchange rate regimes amplify countries' exposure to the global financial cycle.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barrot, Luis-Diego, Serven, Luis
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018-02
Subjects:CAPITAL FLOWS, BUSINESS CYCLES, GLOBAL FINANCIAL CYCLE, INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MOVEMENT, COMMODITY PRICES, VIX, EXCHANGE RATES, INTEREST RATE, GLOBALIZATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/550301519324136710/Gross-capital-flows-common-factors-and-the-global-financial-cycle
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29414
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spelling dig-okr-10986294142024-08-30T08:34:58Z Gross Capital Flows, Common Factors, and the Global Financial Cycle Barrot, Luis-Diego Serven, Luis CAPITAL FLOWS BUSINESS CYCLES GLOBAL FINANCIAL CYCLE INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MOVEMENT COMMODITY PRICES VIX EXCHANGE RATES INTEREST RATE GLOBALIZATION This paper assesses the international comovement of gross capital inflows and outflows using a two-level factor model. Among advanced and emerging countries, capital flows exhibit strong commonality: common (global and country group-specific) factors account, on average, for close to half of their variance. There is a contrast across groups: common factors dominate advanced-country capital flows, while idiosyncratic factors dominate emerging- country flows and, especially, developing-country flows. The reason is the much larger role of global factors among advanced countries. Importantly, these findings apply to both inflows and outflows: their respective common factors are very similar -- although global factors play a bigger role for outflows than for inflows. The commonality of flows reflects a global cycle, summarized by a small set of variables (the VIX, the U.S. real interest rate and real exchange rate, U.S. GDP growth, and world commodity prices) that explain much of the variance of the estimated factors -- especially the global factors. Over time, the quantitative role of the common factors exhibits a "globalization" stage up to 2007, during which they acquire growing importance, followed by a phase of "deglobalization" post-crisis. Greater financial openness, deeper financial systems, and more rigid exchange rate regimes amplify countries' exposure to the global financial cycle. 2018-02-28T23:15:05Z 2018-02-28T23:15:05Z 2018-02 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/550301519324136710/Gross-capital-flows-common-factors-and-the-global-financial-cycle https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29414 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8354 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic CAPITAL FLOWS
BUSINESS CYCLES
GLOBAL FINANCIAL CYCLE
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MOVEMENT
COMMODITY PRICES
VIX
EXCHANGE RATES
INTEREST RATE
GLOBALIZATION
CAPITAL FLOWS
BUSINESS CYCLES
GLOBAL FINANCIAL CYCLE
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MOVEMENT
COMMODITY PRICES
VIX
EXCHANGE RATES
INTEREST RATE
GLOBALIZATION
spellingShingle CAPITAL FLOWS
BUSINESS CYCLES
GLOBAL FINANCIAL CYCLE
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MOVEMENT
COMMODITY PRICES
VIX
EXCHANGE RATES
INTEREST RATE
GLOBALIZATION
CAPITAL FLOWS
BUSINESS CYCLES
GLOBAL FINANCIAL CYCLE
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MOVEMENT
COMMODITY PRICES
VIX
EXCHANGE RATES
INTEREST RATE
GLOBALIZATION
Barrot, Luis-Diego
Serven, Luis
Gross Capital Flows, Common Factors, and the Global Financial Cycle
description This paper assesses the international comovement of gross capital inflows and outflows using a two-level factor model. Among advanced and emerging countries, capital flows exhibit strong commonality: common (global and country group-specific) factors account, on average, for close to half of their variance. There is a contrast across groups: common factors dominate advanced-country capital flows, while idiosyncratic factors dominate emerging- country flows and, especially, developing-country flows. The reason is the much larger role of global factors among advanced countries. Importantly, these findings apply to both inflows and outflows: their respective common factors are very similar -- although global factors play a bigger role for outflows than for inflows. The commonality of flows reflects a global cycle, summarized by a small set of variables (the VIX, the U.S. real interest rate and real exchange rate, U.S. GDP growth, and world commodity prices) that explain much of the variance of the estimated factors -- especially the global factors. Over time, the quantitative role of the common factors exhibits a "globalization" stage up to 2007, during which they acquire growing importance, followed by a phase of "deglobalization" post-crisis. Greater financial openness, deeper financial systems, and more rigid exchange rate regimes amplify countries' exposure to the global financial cycle.
format Working Paper
topic_facet CAPITAL FLOWS
BUSINESS CYCLES
GLOBAL FINANCIAL CYCLE
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MOVEMENT
COMMODITY PRICES
VIX
EXCHANGE RATES
INTEREST RATE
GLOBALIZATION
author Barrot, Luis-Diego
Serven, Luis
author_facet Barrot, Luis-Diego
Serven, Luis
author_sort Barrot, Luis-Diego
title Gross Capital Flows, Common Factors, and the Global Financial Cycle
title_short Gross Capital Flows, Common Factors, and the Global Financial Cycle
title_full Gross Capital Flows, Common Factors, and the Global Financial Cycle
title_fullStr Gross Capital Flows, Common Factors, and the Global Financial Cycle
title_full_unstemmed Gross Capital Flows, Common Factors, and the Global Financial Cycle
title_sort gross capital flows, common factors, and the global financial cycle
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018-02
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/550301519324136710/Gross-capital-flows-common-factors-and-the-global-financial-cycle
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29414
work_keys_str_mv AT barrotluisdiego grosscapitalflowscommonfactorsandtheglobalfinancialcycle
AT servenluis grosscapitalflowscommonfactorsandtheglobalfinancialcycle
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