Turmoil in Latin America and the Caribbean

In this note work from the end of 2001 to August 2002 is updated in an attempt to disentangle potential contagion and spillover effects of the Argentine crisis from other sources of co-movement or market volatility. We also examine the evidence on FDI flows, inquiring about potentially more lasting deterioration of capital flows to the Region. The recent increase in spreads across the region appears more correlated with the largely autonomous increase in spreads in Brazil (caused mostly by uncertainties arising from the electoral period, though also influenced by U.S. stock market turmoil and a fall in exports due to the collapse of the Argentine market) than with the protracted Argentine crisis. To some extent, it reflects some extent general market volatility, which was felt beyond the LAC region. Thus, we may expect that the present situation of high levels and volatility of spreads in the region will be maintained as long as the uncertainties arising from the Brazilian electoral process continue to impact the perception of Brazil country risk; and a further deterioration in this perception might have important consequences on market access and spreads across the region. Political events in other countries (electoral transitions in Bolivia, Colombia, and Argentina, social turmoil in Peru and Venezuela, increased violence in Colombia) as well as some forms of political contagion (Duhalde's statements on the failure of promarket policies in Mercosur; emerging anti-privatization stances in some countries, such as Peru) may have also contributed to spread increases and volatilities. Volatility and increases in risk perception in OECD markets, as a consequence of recent corporate accounting scandals, might also contribute to volatility and high spreads in the region. However, evidence of such effects is so far significant only for a few countries (notably Mexico and Brazil).

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Perry, Guillermo E., Fiess, Norbert
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2003-04
Subjects:VOLATILITY, SPILLOVER EFFECTS, CONTAGION, EXCHANGE RATE, STOCK PRICES, MARKET VOLATILITY, CAPITAL MARKETS, TRADE, BONDS, OUTPUT, EQUITY, EXTERNAL DEBT, TRANSFERS IN KIND, EXPORTS, FINANCIAL MARKETS, EUROBOND MARKETS, FINANCIAL LINKAGES ACCOUNTING, AGGREGATE DEMAND, ASSET PRICES, BILATERAL TRADE, CAPITAL FLIGHT, CAPITAL FLOWS, CORRELATIONS, DEBT, DEPOSITS, DEVALUATION, ECONOMETRICS, ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, EMERGING MARKETS, EXCHANGE RATES, FINANCIAL CRISIS, FINANCIAL STATISTICS, FORECASTS, GDP, MARKET ACCESS, MARKET CONDITIONS, MARKET PROJECTIONS, OUTLIERS, PRICE INDICES, SPREAD, STOCK MARKETS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/04/3049969/turmoil-latin-america-caribbean
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15050
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spelling dig-okr-10986150502024-08-08T17:37:22Z Turmoil in Latin America and the Caribbean Perry, Guillermo E. Fiess, Norbert VOLATILITY SPILLOVER EFFECTS CONTAGION EXCHANGE RATE STOCK PRICES MARKET VOLATILITY CAPITAL MARKETS TRADE BONDS OUTPUT EQUITY EXTERNAL DEBT TRANSFERS IN KIND EXPORTS FINANCIAL MARKETS EUROBOND MARKETS EQUITY FINANCIAL LINKAGES ACCOUNTING AGGREGATE DEMAND ASSET PRICES BILATERAL TRADE BONDS CAPITAL FLIGHT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL MARKETS CONTAGION CORRELATIONS DEBT DEPOSITS DEVALUATION ECONOMETRICS ECONOMIC OUTLOOK EMERGING MARKETS EXCHANGE RATES EXPORTS FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL STATISTICS FORECASTS GDP MARKET ACCESS MARKET CONDITIONS MARKET PROJECTIONS MARKET VOLATILITY OUTLIERS PRICE INDICES SPREAD STOCK MARKETS STOCK PRICES VOLATILITY In this note work from the end of 2001 to August 2002 is updated in an attempt to disentangle potential contagion and spillover effects of the Argentine crisis from other sources of co-movement or market volatility. We also examine the evidence on FDI flows, inquiring about potentially more lasting deterioration of capital flows to the Region. The recent increase in spreads across the region appears more correlated with the largely autonomous increase in spreads in Brazil (caused mostly by uncertainties arising from the electoral period, though also influenced by U.S. stock market turmoil and a fall in exports due to the collapse of the Argentine market) than with the protracted Argentine crisis. To some extent, it reflects some extent general market volatility, which was felt beyond the LAC region. Thus, we may expect that the present situation of high levels and volatility of spreads in the region will be maintained as long as the uncertainties arising from the Brazilian electoral process continue to impact the perception of Brazil country risk; and a further deterioration in this perception might have important consequences on market access and spreads across the region. Political events in other countries (electoral transitions in Bolivia, Colombia, and Argentina, social turmoil in Peru and Venezuela, increased violence in Colombia) as well as some forms of political contagion (Duhalde's statements on the failure of promarket policies in Mercosur; emerging anti-privatization stances in some countries, such as Peru) may have also contributed to spread increases and volatilities. Volatility and increases in risk perception in OECD markets, as a consequence of recent corporate accounting scandals, might also contribute to volatility and high spreads in the region. However, evidence of such effects is so far significant only for a few countries (notably Mexico and Brazil). 2013-08-14T16:01:36Z 2013-08-14T16:01:36Z 2003-04 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/04/3049969/turmoil-latin-america-caribbean 8-8213-5479-5 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15050 English en_US World Bank Working Paper;No. 3 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC: World Bank
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
en_US
topic VOLATILITY
SPILLOVER EFFECTS
CONTAGION
EXCHANGE RATE
STOCK PRICES
MARKET VOLATILITY
CAPITAL MARKETS
TRADE
BONDS
OUTPUT
EQUITY
EXTERNAL DEBT
TRANSFERS IN KIND
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
EUROBOND MARKETS
EQUITY
FINANCIAL LINKAGES ACCOUNTING
AGGREGATE DEMAND
ASSET PRICES
BILATERAL TRADE
BONDS
CAPITAL FLIGHT
CAPITAL FLOWS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CONTAGION
CORRELATIONS
DEBT
DEPOSITS
DEVALUATION
ECONOMETRICS
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
EMERGING MARKETS
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL STATISTICS
FORECASTS
GDP
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET CONDITIONS
MARKET PROJECTIONS
MARKET VOLATILITY
OUTLIERS
PRICE INDICES
SPREAD
STOCK MARKETS
STOCK PRICES
VOLATILITY
VOLATILITY
SPILLOVER EFFECTS
CONTAGION
EXCHANGE RATE
STOCK PRICES
MARKET VOLATILITY
CAPITAL MARKETS
TRADE
BONDS
OUTPUT
EQUITY
EXTERNAL DEBT
TRANSFERS IN KIND
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
EUROBOND MARKETS
EQUITY
FINANCIAL LINKAGES ACCOUNTING
AGGREGATE DEMAND
ASSET PRICES
BILATERAL TRADE
BONDS
CAPITAL FLIGHT
CAPITAL FLOWS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CONTAGION
CORRELATIONS
DEBT
DEPOSITS
DEVALUATION
ECONOMETRICS
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
EMERGING MARKETS
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL STATISTICS
FORECASTS
GDP
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET CONDITIONS
MARKET PROJECTIONS
MARKET VOLATILITY
OUTLIERS
PRICE INDICES
SPREAD
STOCK MARKETS
STOCK PRICES
VOLATILITY
spellingShingle VOLATILITY
SPILLOVER EFFECTS
CONTAGION
EXCHANGE RATE
STOCK PRICES
MARKET VOLATILITY
CAPITAL MARKETS
TRADE
BONDS
OUTPUT
EQUITY
EXTERNAL DEBT
TRANSFERS IN KIND
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
EUROBOND MARKETS
EQUITY
FINANCIAL LINKAGES ACCOUNTING
AGGREGATE DEMAND
ASSET PRICES
BILATERAL TRADE
BONDS
CAPITAL FLIGHT
CAPITAL FLOWS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CONTAGION
CORRELATIONS
DEBT
DEPOSITS
DEVALUATION
ECONOMETRICS
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
EMERGING MARKETS
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL STATISTICS
FORECASTS
GDP
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET CONDITIONS
MARKET PROJECTIONS
MARKET VOLATILITY
OUTLIERS
PRICE INDICES
SPREAD
STOCK MARKETS
STOCK PRICES
VOLATILITY
VOLATILITY
SPILLOVER EFFECTS
CONTAGION
EXCHANGE RATE
STOCK PRICES
MARKET VOLATILITY
CAPITAL MARKETS
TRADE
BONDS
OUTPUT
EQUITY
EXTERNAL DEBT
TRANSFERS IN KIND
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
EUROBOND MARKETS
EQUITY
FINANCIAL LINKAGES ACCOUNTING
AGGREGATE DEMAND
ASSET PRICES
BILATERAL TRADE
BONDS
CAPITAL FLIGHT
CAPITAL FLOWS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CONTAGION
CORRELATIONS
DEBT
DEPOSITS
DEVALUATION
ECONOMETRICS
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
EMERGING MARKETS
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL STATISTICS
FORECASTS
GDP
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET CONDITIONS
MARKET PROJECTIONS
MARKET VOLATILITY
OUTLIERS
PRICE INDICES
SPREAD
STOCK MARKETS
STOCK PRICES
VOLATILITY
Perry, Guillermo E.
Fiess, Norbert
Turmoil in Latin America and the Caribbean
description In this note work from the end of 2001 to August 2002 is updated in an attempt to disentangle potential contagion and spillover effects of the Argentine crisis from other sources of co-movement or market volatility. We also examine the evidence on FDI flows, inquiring about potentially more lasting deterioration of capital flows to the Region. The recent increase in spreads across the region appears more correlated with the largely autonomous increase in spreads in Brazil (caused mostly by uncertainties arising from the electoral period, though also influenced by U.S. stock market turmoil and a fall in exports due to the collapse of the Argentine market) than with the protracted Argentine crisis. To some extent, it reflects some extent general market volatility, which was felt beyond the LAC region. Thus, we may expect that the present situation of high levels and volatility of spreads in the region will be maintained as long as the uncertainties arising from the Brazilian electoral process continue to impact the perception of Brazil country risk; and a further deterioration in this perception might have important consequences on market access and spreads across the region. Political events in other countries (electoral transitions in Bolivia, Colombia, and Argentina, social turmoil in Peru and Venezuela, increased violence in Colombia) as well as some forms of political contagion (Duhalde's statements on the failure of promarket policies in Mercosur; emerging anti-privatization stances in some countries, such as Peru) may have also contributed to spread increases and volatilities. Volatility and increases in risk perception in OECD markets, as a consequence of recent corporate accounting scandals, might also contribute to volatility and high spreads in the region. However, evidence of such effects is so far significant only for a few countries (notably Mexico and Brazil).
topic_facet VOLATILITY
SPILLOVER EFFECTS
CONTAGION
EXCHANGE RATE
STOCK PRICES
MARKET VOLATILITY
CAPITAL MARKETS
TRADE
BONDS
OUTPUT
EQUITY
EXTERNAL DEBT
TRANSFERS IN KIND
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
EUROBOND MARKETS
EQUITY
FINANCIAL LINKAGES ACCOUNTING
AGGREGATE DEMAND
ASSET PRICES
BILATERAL TRADE
BONDS
CAPITAL FLIGHT
CAPITAL FLOWS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CONTAGION
CORRELATIONS
DEBT
DEPOSITS
DEVALUATION
ECONOMETRICS
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
EMERGING MARKETS
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORTS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL STATISTICS
FORECASTS
GDP
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET CONDITIONS
MARKET PROJECTIONS
MARKET VOLATILITY
OUTLIERS
PRICE INDICES
SPREAD
STOCK MARKETS
STOCK PRICES
VOLATILITY
author Perry, Guillermo E.
Fiess, Norbert
author_facet Perry, Guillermo E.
Fiess, Norbert
author_sort Perry, Guillermo E.
title Turmoil in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_short Turmoil in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_full Turmoil in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_fullStr Turmoil in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_full_unstemmed Turmoil in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_sort turmoil in latin america and the caribbean
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2003-04
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/04/3049969/turmoil-latin-america-caribbean
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15050
work_keys_str_mv AT perryguillermoe turmoilinlatinamericaandthecaribbean
AT fiessnorbert turmoilinlatinamericaandthecaribbean
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