Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Covid-19 pandemic" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 A portrait of online gambling: a look at a transformation amid a pandemic Kairouz S; Savard AC; Murch WS; Dixon MR; Martin NB; Brodeur M; Dauphinais S; Ferland F; Hamel D; Dufour M; French M; Monson E; Van Mourik V; Morvannou A; 40770758
CONCORDIA
2 Canadian pediatric eating disorder programs and virtual care during the COVID-19 pandemic: a mixed-methods approach to understanding clinicians' perspectives Novack K; Dufour R; Picard L; Taddeo D; Nadeau PO; Katzman DK; Booij L; Chadi N; 37101241
PSYCHOLOGY
3 The unsanitary other and racism during the pandemic: analysis of purity discourses on social media in India, France and United States of America during the COVID-19 pandemic Desmarais C; Roy M; Nguyen MT; Venkatesh V; Rousseau C; 36861381
CONCORDIA
4 The effect of COVID-19 pandemic on return-volume and return-volatility relationships in cryptocurrency markets Foroutan P; Lahmiri S; 36068915
CONCORDIA
5 Designing a hybrid reinforcement learning based algorithm with application in prediction of the COVID-19 pandemic in Quebec. Khalilpourazari S, Hashemi Doulabi H 33424076
ENCS
6 Assessing the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on urban transportation and air quality in Canada. Tian X, An C, Chen Z, Tian Z 33401062
ENCS
7 Randomness, Informational Entropy, and Volatility Interdependencies among the Major World Markets: The Role of the COVID-19 Pandemic Lahmiri S; Bekiros S; 33286604
JMSB
8 COVID-CAPS: A Capsule Network-based Framework for Identification of COVID-19 cases from X-ray Images. Afshar P, Heidarian S, Naderkhani F, Oikonomou A, Plataniotis KN, Mohammadi A 32958971
ENCS
9 Renyi entropy and mutual information measurement of market expectations and investor fear during the COVID-19 pandemic Lahmiri S; Bekiros S; 32834621
JMSB

 

Title:Randomness, Informational Entropy, and Volatility Interdependencies among the Major World Markets: The Role of the COVID-19 Pandemic
Authors:Lahmiri SBekiros S
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33286604/
DOI:10.3390/e22080833
Publication:Entropy (Basel, Switzerland)
Keywords:BitcoinCOVID-19 pandemicGARCHenergy markethierarchical clusteringprecious metal marketstock marketwavelet packet Shannon entropy
PMID:33286604 Category: Date Added:2020-12-08
Dept Affiliation: JMSB
1 Department of Supply Chain & Business Technology Management, John Molson School of Business, Concordia University, Montreal, QC H3H 0A1, Canada.
2 Department of Economics, European University Institute, 50014 Florence, Italy.
3 Rimini Centre for Economic Analysis, Wilfrid Laurier University, 75 University Ave W., Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5, Canada.

Description:

The main purpose of our paper is to evaluate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on randomness in volatility series of world major markets and to examine its effect on their interconnections. The data set includes equity (Bitcoin and Standard and Poor's 500), precious metals (Gold and Silver), and energy markets (West Texas Instruments, Brent, and Gas). The generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity model is applied to the return series. The wavelet packet Shannon entropy is calculated from the estimated volatility series to assess randomness. Hierarchical clustering is employed to examine interconnections between volatilities. We found that (i) randomness in volatility of the S& P500 and in the volatility of precious metals were the most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, while (ii) randomness in energy markets was less affected by the pandemic than equity and precious metal markets. Additionally, (iii) we showed an apparent emergence of three volatility clusters: precious metals (Gold and Silver), energy (Brent and Gas), and Bitcoin and WTI, and (iv) the S& P500 volatility represents a unique cluster, while (v) the S& P500 market volatility was not connected to the volatility of Bitcoin, energy, and precious metal markets before the pandemic. Moreover, (vi) the S& P500 market volatility became connected to volatility in energy markets and volatility in Bitcoin during the pandemic, and (vii) the volatility in precious metals is less connected to volatility in energy markets and to volatility in Bitcoin market during the pandemic. It is concluded that (i) investors may diversify their portfolios across single constituents of clusters, (ii) investing in energy markets during the pandemic period is appealing because of lower randomness in their respective volatilities, and that (iii) constructing a diversified portfolio would not be challenging as clustering structures are fairly stable across periods.





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