Abstract
This study examines the quantile dependence and directional predictability from the US to a vast range of emerging equity markets (EMs). This issue is addressed using the cross-quantilogram approach and daily data from January 2004 to April 2025. Our findings confirm that extreme conditions in the US market affect various quantiles of stock returns in EMs; however, the detailed picture of the dependence patterns varies significantly between quantile orders. A large sharp decrease (increase) in US stock returns increases the likelihood of an immediate extreme low (high) return in EMs, and the directional predictability is much higher at the tails of the distribution than at the median. We also find evidence of an asymmetric effect across quantiles, with negative spillovers having a stronger impact than positive spillovers. Furthermore, a higher degree of connectedness is observed between the US and EMs in the Americas than in other regions. The predictability remains pronounced after controlling for different global uncertainty measures, such as the Volatility Index (VIX), Economic Policy Uncertainty (EPU), Equity Market-related Economic Uncertainty Index (EMU), and Geopolitical Risk Index (GPR). Notably, EMs exhibited stronger connections with the US during the 2008 Global Financial Crisis than during the COVID-19 pandemic or the Russia-Ukraine war.
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