The goal of the paper is to verify the direction of sovereign risk
transmission between sovereign CDS and sovereign bond markets in the
Central European economies: the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland. We
focus on the hectic crisis period of 2008-2013. On the one hand, the
sCDS market is said to react faster to the news than the sovereign bonds
market. On the other hand, the bond market is related more closely to
the internal situation of the country than the sCDS one and thus can
price the sovereign risk more accurate. Moreover, the relationships
between the markets can change during crisis time. We find that in the
case of most risky and most indebted economy in Hungary there was a
feedback between sCDS and sovereign bonds risk. In the case of Poland
sCDS market risk Granger caused the risk of sovereign bonds – if we
exclude instantaneous causality from the analysis; when it is included,
feedback occurred. Eventually, in the case of the Czech Republic the
risk of sCDS market Granger caused risk of the bonds market.