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30 November 2016

CEPS: Policy Uncertainty and International Financial Markets: The Case of Brexit


Authors show that Brexit-induced policy uncertainty will continue to cause instability in key financial markets and has the potential to damage the real economy in both the UK and other European countries, even in the medium run.

This study assesses the impact of the uncertainty caused by Brexit on both the UK and international financial markets, for the first and second statistical moments (i.e. on the changes and standard deviations of the respective variables.) As financial markets are by nature highly interlinked, the uncertainty engendered by Brexit is also likely to have an impact on financial markets in several other countries. By analysing this impact, the authors aim to gain some insight into market expectations about the magnitude of the economic impact beyond the UK and which other countries might be affected.

They first use both the Diebold and Yilmaz (2012) and the Hafner and Herwartz (2008) method to estimate the time-varying interactions between UK policy uncertainty, which is largely is attributed to uncertainty about Brexit, and UK financial market volatilities (second statistical moment) to try and identify the direction of causality among them. Second, they use two other measures of the perceived probability of Brexit before the referendum, namely daily data released by Betfair and results of polls published by Bloomberg. Based on these datasets, and using both panel and single-country SUR (seemingly unrelated regressions) estimation methods, the authors analyse the Brexit effect on levels of stock returns, sovereign credit default swaps (CDS), 10-year interest rates in 19 predominantly European countries, and those of the British pound and the euro (first statistical moment).

They show that Brexit-induced policy uncertainty will continue to cause instability in key financial markets and has the potential to damage the real economy in both the UK and other European countries, even in the medium run. The main losers outside the UK are the ‘GIIPS’ economies: Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain.

Full publication



© CEPS - Centre for European Policy Studies


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