Volatility in Indian Stock Markets


Book Description

The ups and downs of the financial markets are always in the news. After all, there's plenty to report. Wide price fluctuations are a daily occurrence on the world's stock markets as investors react to economic, business, and political events. Of late, the markets have been showing extremely erratic movements, which are in no way tandem with the information that is fed to the markets. Thus chaos prevails in the markets with investor optimism at unexpected levels. Irrational exuberance has substituted financial prudence. Has the stock market volatility increased? Has the Indian market developed into a speculative bubble due to the emergence of quot;New Economyquot; stocks? Why is this volatility so pronounced? In this paper we try to analyse these questions in the context of Indian stock markets. We try to unearth the rationale for these weird movements. We examine the fundamentalist view put forward by economists who argue that volatility can be explained by Efficient Market Hypothesis. On the other hand, the view that volatility is caused by psychological factors is tested. An empirical study of BSE Sensex and a set of representative stocks are carried out to find the changes in their volatility in the last two years. The stock market regulation in introduction of rolling settlement and dematerialization as a measure of reducing volatility is put to test. Thus, the paper will help the investors as well as market regulators to make the markets more efficient.




Stock Market Volatility in India


Book Description













Stock Market Volatility


Book Description

Up-to-Date Research Sheds New Light on This Area Taking into account the ongoing worldwide financial crisis, Stock Market Volatility provides insight to better understand volatility in various stock markets. This timely volume is one of the first to draw on a range of international authorities who offer their expertise on market volatility in devel




Volatility in International Stock Markets An Empirical Study


Book Description

Business investment is concerned with the provision of funds for investment in business enterprise, an investor must offer whatever is invested in this way, and this means that the investor must sacrifice consumption and save to offer the funds. Savers and the users of their funds come jointly in the market for investment, where the normal rules of supply and demand apply unless there is government interfering with interest rates. The cost of money is the rate of interest rewarded for the use. If the demand for investment funds is greater than the funds offered for investment by savers, then the rate of interest will increase until people in the market are induced to sacrifice consumption and make their reserves available for investment.







Stock Market Volatility and Corporate Investment


Book Description

Despite concerns are often voiced on the so called “excess volatility” of the stock market, little is known about the implications of market volatility for the real economy. This paper examines whether the stock market volatility affects real fixed investment. The empirical evidence obtained from the US data shows that market volatility has independent effects on investment over and above that of stock returns. Volatility and its changes are negatively related to investment growth. To the extent volatility depresses fixed capital formation and hence future income growth, the results suggest the desirability of reducing stock market volatility.