The asymmetric effects of climate risk on higher-moment connectedness among carbon, energy and metals markets

被引:30
|
作者
Zhou, Yuqin [1 ]
Wu, Shan [2 ]
Liu, Zhenhua [3 ]
Rognone, Lavinia [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Chongqing Normal Univ, Sch Econ & Management, Chongqing, Peoples R China
[2] Nanjing Univ Finance & Econ, Sch Finance, Nanjing, Peoples R China
[3] China Univ Min & Technol, Sch Econ & Management, Xuzhou, Peoples R China
[4] Univ Edinburgh, Business Sch, Edinburgh EH8 9JS, Scotland
[5] Univ Manchester, Alliance Manchester Business Sch, Manchester M15 6PB, England
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
VOLATILITY SPILLOVERS; FREQUENCY DYNAMICS; OIL MARKET; CENTRALITY; IMPACTS; PRICES; POLICY;
D O I
10.1038/s41467-023-42925-9
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Climate change affects price fluctuations in the carbon, energy and metals markets through physical and transition risks. Climate physical risk is mainly caused by extreme weather, natural disasters and other events caused by climate change, whereas climate transition risk mainly results from the gradual switchover to a low-carbon economy. Given that the connectedness between financial markets may be affected by various factors such as extreme events and economic transformation, understanding the different roles of climate physical risk and transition risk on the higher-moment connectedness across markets has important implications for investors to construct portfolios and regulators to establish regulation system. Here, using the GJRSK model, time-frequency connectedness framework and quantile-on-quantile method, we show asymmetric effects of climate risk on connectedness among carbon, energy and metals markets, with higher impacts of climate physical risk on upward risk spillovers, and greater effects of climate transition risk on the downside risk of kurtosis connectedness. Here the authors explore the connectedness of the carbon, energy, and metals markets. They find asymmetric effects of climate risk with higher physical risk impacts on upward risk spillovers, and greater transition risk effects on the downside risk of kurtosis connectedness.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 21 条
  • [1] Connectedness in implied higher-order moments of precious metals and energy markets
    Bouri, Elie
    Lei, Xiaojie
    Xu, Yahua
    Zhang, Hongwei
    ENERGY, 2023, 263
  • [2] Multidimensional risk spillovers among carbon, energy and nonferrous metals markets: Evidence from the quantile VAR network
    Zhou, Yuqin
    Wu, Shan
    Zhang, Zeyi
    ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2022, 114
  • [3] Global shocks and local connectedness: evidence from dynamic tail risk interdependences among Chinese regional carbon markets
    Chen, Zhang-Hangjian
    Yu, Cheng-Ye
    Gao, Xiang
    Li, Xiaohong
    APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2024,
  • [4] Quantile connectedness among fintech, carbon future, and energy markets: Implications for hedging and investment strategies
    Su, Xianfang
    He, Jian
    ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2024, 139
  • [5] Physical climate risk attention and dynamic volatility connectedness among new energy stocks
    Gong, Xu
    Liao, Qin
    ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2024, 136
  • [6] Asymmetric tail risk spillovers between carbon emission allowance and energy markets: evidence from China
    He, Ting
    APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2025,
  • [7] Time-frequency dependence and connectedness among global oil markets: Fresh evidence from higher-order moment perspective
    Cui, Jinxin
    Maghyereh, Aktham
    JOURNAL OF COMMODITY MARKETS, 2023, 30
  • [8] Assessing systemic risk and connectedness among dirty and clean energy markets from the quantile and expectile perspectives
    Syuhada, Khreshna
    Hakim, Arief
    Suprijanto, Djoko
    ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2024, 129
  • [9] Asymmetric volatility spillovers among new energy, ESG, green bond and carbon markets
    Wu, Ruirui
    Qin, Zhongfeng
    ENERGY, 2024, 292
  • [10] Risk spillover changes among commodity futures, stock and ESG markets: A study based on multidimensional higher order moment perspective
    Yu, Peining
    Zhou, Luohui
    Chen, Zejun
    Li, Chujin
    FINANCE RESEARCH LETTERS, 2025, 71