Price and Volatility Linkages between Indian Stocks and their European GDRs
Proceeding: 11th International Academic Conference (IAC)Publication Date: 2014-06-24
Authors : Ray Partha; Madhavan Vinodh;
Page : 286-320
Keywords : Stock Prices; Dual listing; GDR; India; Vector Autoregression; DCC-GARCH.;
Abstract
This paper tests for relationship between Indian GDRs traded in Luxembourg / London and their underlying shares traded in Mumbai at two levels, viz., (a) between the stock prices at two exchanges; and (b) between the volatilities of the stock prices between the two exchanges. The relationship is studied between the GDR price and the domestic share price along with the appropriate exchange rates (INR-EUR/INR-GBP), the foreign stock market index (LuXX/FTSE100) and the NSE/BSE-listed national stock index (Nifty/Sensex) using Level VAR models and DCC-GARCH models. Our sample comprises of Luxembourg GDRs issued by Ambuja Cements, Indiabulls Financial Services, IndusInd Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Sterling International Enterprises, Tata Motors, Tata Power, and United Spirits; and London GDRs issued by the following companies, viz., Larsen & Toubro, State Bank of India, Axis Bank and Tata Steel. The results indicate strong association between the GDR prices and their underlying stocks. To be specific, VAR outcomes indicate that there is quite a bit of similarity between the two prices of scrips considered for this study ? one trading in Mumbai and the other trading in Luxembourg (London). Further, DCC-GARCH model outcomes indicate that, there is by and large, high dynamic correlation between Indian GDRs traded in Luxembourg (London) and their underlying stocks listed in Mumbai. Further, we found the price and volatility linkages between GDRs listed in London Stock Exchange (LSE) and their underlying scrips trading in NSE to be qualitatively similar to the findings obtained in connection with Luxembourg GDRs. Such similarity in findings, notwithstanding the difference in degree of information disclosure requirements at London and Luxembourg, reflects the stock-exchange-invariant nature of Law of One Price (LOOP), which in turn is indicative of a less significant impact of foreign stock exchange per se, when it comes to price dynamics of dually-listed Indian stocks.
Other Latest Articles
- Financial constraints and modes of market exit in Slovenian manufacturing and service firms
- Furthering the use and scope of the Project Implementation Profile (PIP): Critical success factors for small scale livestock production foreign aid projects
- Management and structure of hospital alliances
- Circumstances of the Usage of Technological Tools in History Education in Elementary Level
- IDENTIFYING LEARNING LEVELS OF THE NINTH GRADE STUDENTS VIA COMPUTER-BASED TEACHING TECHIQUES ON THE THEME “THE SHAPE AND EFFECTS OF EARTH
Last modified: 2015-03-07 20:13:53