Abstract
This paper investigates the effects of oil price shocks on stock market returns in emerging countries. It differs from previous works in three main aspects: i) we distinguish three groups of countries, the largest net-oil importing countries, the moderately oil-dependent countries, and the largest net-oil exporting countries; ii) The potential influence of bullish and bearish market conditions on the causal relationship between oil and stock returns is controlled for in our analysis; iii) The empirical investigation is based on an analysis of long-term correlation and a conditional multifactor pricing model. Using data from twenty-five emerging countries, our results suggest that oil price risk is significantly priced in emerging markets, and that the oil impact is asymmetric with respect to market phases.
► We study the effects of oil price shocks on emerging market returns. ► The reaction to oil shocks depends on market's oil-dependence profile. ► Stock returns are more conditionally sensitive to risk factors. ► Oil risk is prevailing for markets exhibiting a positive correlation with oil.