Integrating Europe's Financial Markets


Book Description

By and large, EU financial integration has been a success story. Still, the reform agenda is far from finished. What are the remaining challenges? What are the gains of closer financial market integration? This IMF book tracks the European Union's journey along the path to a single financial market and identifies the challenges and priorities that remain ahead. It pays particular attention to the most recent integration efforts in the European Union following the introduction of the euro. The study looks at the importance of financial integration, in particular for economic growth, the interplay between banks and markets, and equity market integration. It closely examines the relationship between financial integration and financial stability. This interaction presents the European Union with a challenge, but also with the opportunity to play a pioneering role in developing a regional approach to financial stability that could provide lessons for the rest of the world.




Stock Market Integration in Europe


Book Description

Western Europe today boasts some 35 stock exchanges. It is almost unanimously agreed that this number is too high and that in the future, European stock markets are likely to become fewer in number and more internationalized in their listings, trading, and membership.Europe has also witnessed more exercises in stock market integration compared with any other region in the world. Initiatives toward this end were undertaken by regulators as well as the private sector (stock exchanges and investors). Consequently, Europe may be viewed as a gigantic laboratory in which real-life experiments in stock market integration were held. The fact that most of those efforts had failed or were abandoned first attests to the difficulties in achieving this goal. It may also indicate the conditions which should be more conductive to success. The paper attempts to tell the story of European stock market integration in a way that highlights the difficulties in attaining cooperation and the tools that were used to overcome them.The main theme of this paper is that this integration process can only be understood as an integral part of a broader economic and political integration which EU countries have been pursuing for some 40 years. The European experience shows that considerable compromises are required for bringing about stock market integration. It is the broader framework of the EU, with its institutions, political implications, and momentum, that ensures that stock market integration proceeds on track, even if with occasional halts.







The Euro Effect on the Integration of the European Stock Markets


Book Description

Since there is not a single European stock market, the main objective of this work is to verify whether the euro introduction affects the integration of the European stock markets, and to investigate whether the integration of the European stock markets has increased after the introduction of the euro. To do so, the Vector Autoregression (VAR) methodology is applied, more specifically the Impulse Response Function (IRF) is estimated. The euro has clearly added to the pressures from technological change and globalisation for the creation of new alliances among Europe's exchanges. In fact, the main conclusions of this empirical study show the following findings: (1) The stock markets considered presented a high degree of integration and efficiency before the euro. Therefore both stock prices and volatilities reflect idiosyncratic characteristics of each stock market, and the euro does not increase the degree of correlation between them. On returns, however, the increase of the correlation after the euro is noticed between the main stock exchanges: the German, French, Italian, Dutch and Spanish ones. (2) Inside the European stock exchanges, the German one has become a leader market after the euro. (3) The euro area is acquiring a major importance with respect to the other two main financial areas, the US$ and the Yen, and maintains its influence on the Swiss franc area. Moreover, the national stock markets in Europe have reduced their dollar dependence, and increased their influence on the Yen. Definitely the integration in EU equity markets has been mainly evident during the 1990s, but the introduction of the euro has accelerated the intensity of the process.




Integration of European Stock Markets


Book Description

We examine to what extent Europeþs stock markets are integrated, and how this can be measured. We review 54 empirical studies and find an overemphasis on price-based measures and a need for more quantity-based studies. We update the Baele et al (2004) study on investment funds' equity holdings to March 2006 for ten euro area and four non-euro area countries, provide additional quantity based evidence, and discuss integration theories. Our results indicate a decline in home bias particularly after the advent of the euro. We conclude that although European stock markets have undergone significant developments, the level of European integration is below expectations and there is a high joint integration with the U.S. (author's abstract).




Achieving Market Integration


Book Description

Providing an overview of the infrastructure of European Securities markets, this text offers topical analysis of developments and trends in market integration. The author provides industry professionals with a concise exposition of how the post-Euro market works, as well as offering laymen an entry point into the subject. Topics include: wholesale electronic execution; central counterpart clearing; and consolidation of the securities depositories.







How Does European Integration Affect the European Stock Markets?


Book Description

This paper examines the integration of stock markets in Germany, France, Netherlands, Ireland and UK over January 1973-August 2008 at the aggregate market and industry level considering the following industries: basic materials, consumer goods, industrials, consumer services, health care and financials. The analysis is carried out by using correlation analysis, -convergence and s-convergence methods. -convergence serves to measure the speed of convergence and s-convergence serves to measure the degree of financial integration. It might be expected a priori that European stock markets have converged during the process of monetary, economic and financial integration in Europe. This study offers evidence for an increasing degree of integration both at the aggregate level and also at the industry level, although some differences in the speed and degree of convergence exist among stock markets. Surprisingly, there is an upswing of cross sectional dispersion for health care industry, which is more prone to regional shocks. The other industries show a significant s-convergence. The average half-life of a shock to convergence changes at a range from 5.75 days for aggregate market to 10.25 days for consumer goods.




European Financial Markets


Book Description

EU membership involves political and economic reforms which influence financial markets in the new member states. This study empirically explores and quantifies the effects of EU accession on the risk and return of equity markets in eight Central and Eastern European markets joining the EU in 2004. The study also incorporates a review of how the influence of macroeconomic variables and the level of integration with global and European markets change as a result of EU membership. Based on empirical tests using weekly data over ten years, this study concludes that EU membership results in a significant decline in equity market volatility and a significant increase in risk-adjusted, but not absolute, equity returns. Furthermore, the study suggests that equity markets in new EU member states become increasingly influenced by global rather than local macroeconomic factors after the EU accession and that the level of integration with global markets increases.