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Dive into the research topics where Bertrand Candelon is active.

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Featured researches published by Bertrand Candelon.


Archive | 2011

Sovereign Rating News and Financial Markets Spillovers: Evidence from the European Debt Crisis

Rabah Arezki; Bertrand Candelon; Amadou Nicolas Racine Sy

This paper examines the spillover effects of sovereign rating news on European financial markets during the period 2007-2010. Our main finding is that sovereign rating downgrades have statistically and economically significant spillover effects both across countries and financial markets. The sign and magnitude of the spillover effects depend both on the type of announcements, the source country experiencing the downgrade and the rating agency from which the announcements originates. However, we also find evidence that downgrades to near speculative grade ratings for relatively large economies such as Greece have a systematic spillover effects. Rating-based triggers may help explain these results.


Pacific Economic Review | 2010

Testing For Asset Market Linkages: A New Approach Based On Time-Varying Copulas

Hans Manner; Bertrand Candelon

This paper proposes a new approach based on time-varying copulas to test for the presence of increases in stock market interdependence (also known as shift contagion) after a financial crisis. We discuss the importance of considering simultaneously separate breaks in volatility and dependence. Without such consideration, the contagion test turns out to be biased. A sequential algorithm is proposed to tackle this problem. Applied to the recent 1997 Asian crisis, the analysis confirms that breaks in variances always precede those in the dependence parameter. Moreover, a significant ‘J-shape’ evolution of the dependence parameter is detected, supporting the idea of shift contagion.


International Economic Review | 2015

HIERARCHICAL ORGANIZATION AND PERFORMANCE INEQUALITY: EVIDENCE FROM PROFESSIONAL CYCLING

Bertrand Candelon; Arnaud Dupuy

This article proposes an equilibrium theory of the organization of work in an economy with an implicit market for productive time. In this market, agents buy or sell productive time. This implicit market gives rise to the formation of teams, organized in hierarchies with one leader (buyer) at the top and helpers (sellers) below. Relative to autarky, hierarchical organization leads to higher within and between team payoffs/productivity inequality. This prediction is tested empirically in the context of professional road cycling. We show that 46% of performance inequality in the Tour de France is due to hierarchical organization within team whereas team composition only accounts for 6%.


Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics | 2013

Network Effects and Infrastructure Productivity in Developing Countries

Bertrand Candelon; Gilbert Colletaz; Christophe Hurlin

This study proposes to investigate the threshold effects in the productivity of infrastructure investment in developing countries. It concludes to their presence in the relationship between output and private and public inputs as well as network effects in the productivity of infrastructure. When the available stock of infrastructure is low, investment has the same productivity as non-infrastructure investment. On the contrary, when a minimum network is available, the marginal productivity of infrastructure investment is greater than the productivity of other investments. Finally, when the main network is achieved, its marginal productivity becomes similar to the productivity of other investment.


How Did Markets React to Stress Tests? | 2015

How Did Markets React to Stress Tests

Bertrand Candelon; Amadou Nicolas Racine Sy

We use event study methods to compare the market reaction to U.S. and EU-wide stress tests performed from 2009 to 2013. Typically, stress tests have a positive impact on stressed banks’ returns. While the 2009 U.S. stress test had a large positive outcome, the impact of subsequent U.S. exercises decreased over time. The 2011 EU exercise is the only EU-wide stress test that resulted in a significant negative market reaction. Comparing past exercises suggests that the qualitative aspects of the governance of stress tests can matter more for stock market participants than technical elements, such as the level of the minimum capital adequacy threshold or the extent of data disclosure.


Applied Economics | 2009

The Nature of Occupational Unemployment Rates in the United States: Hysteresis or Structural?

Bertrand Candelon; Arnaud Dupuy; Luis A. Gil-Alana

This article provides new evidence on the nature of occupational differences in unemployment dynamics, which is relevant for the debate between the structural or hysteresis hypotheses. We develop a procedure that permits us to test for the presence of a structural break at unknown date. Our approach allows the investigation of a broader range of persistence than the 0/1 paradigm about the order of integration, usually implemented for testing the hypothesis of hysteresis in occupational unemployment. In almost all occupations, we find support for both the structuralist and the hysteresis hypotheses, but stress the importance of estimating the degree of persistence of seasonal shocks along with the degree of long-run persistence on raw data without applying seasonal filters. Indeed hysteresis appears to be underestimated when data are initially adjusted using traditional seasonal filters.


Archive | 2012

Long-Term Asset Tail Risk in Developed and Emerging Markets

Stefan Straetmans; Bertrand Candelon

The tail of financial returns is typically governed by a power law (i.e. “fat tails”). However, the constancy of the so-called tail index α which dictates the tail decay has been hardly investigated. We study the finite sample properties of some recently proposed endogenous tests for structural change in α. Given that the finite sample critical values strongly depend on the tail parameters of the return distribution we propose a bootstrap-based version of the structural change test. Our empirical application spans a wide variety of long-term developed and emerging financial asset returns. Somewhat surprisingly, the tail behavior of emerging stock markets is not more strongly inclined to structural change than their developed counterparts. Emerging currencies, on the contrary, are more prone to shifts in the tail behavior than developed currencies. Our results suggest that extreme value theory (EVT) applications in hedging tail risks or in assessing the (changing) propensity to financial crises can assume stationary tail behavior over long time spans provided one considers portfolios that solely consist of stocks or bonds. However, our break results also indicate it is advisable to use shorter estimation windows when applying EVT methods to emerging currency portfolios.


Are there Spillover Effects From Munis? | 2011

Are there Spillover Effects From Munis

Bertrand Candelon; Rabah Arezki; Amadou Nicolas Racine Sy

This paper studies the spillover effects both within the bond markets for individual U.S. states and between the latter and the market for U.S. Treasury securities. We perform the Forbes and Rigobon (2002) spillover test using daily bond yield data over the period 2005 to 2011. Results are twofold. First, we find that between most markets for individual U.S. state bonds there are negative spillovers. In other words, an increase in borrowing costs in one U.S. state results in better borrowing conditions for other states. Second, we find no substantial spillover effect between shocks originating from state securities and from federal markets, except for a few large issuers. Using causality tests in the frequency domain, we find that the Treasury bond market directly causes changes in the markets for municipal bonds in both the short and long run. There is also some evidence of causality from the municipal to the Treasury bond market, but only of a long-run nature. Our results shed some light on the policy debate on the nature of spillover effects within fiscal unions.


Journal of Statistical Computation and Simulation | 2003

On finite sample properties of the tests of Robinson (1994) for fractional integration

Bertrand Candelon; Luis A. Gil-Alana

This article proposes a bootstrap version of the tests of Robinson (1994) for testing unit and/or fractional roots. The finite-sample behaviour of the tests, based on these bootstrap critical values is compared with those based on asymptotic and on finite-sample results and with a number of leading unit-root tests. The Monte-Carlo simulations indicate that the bootstrap version of the tests of Robinson (1994) outperforms the other tests, including the one using finite-sample critical values. The improvement in the size and the power is particularly important under AR(1) alternatives. A small empirical application is also carried out with inflation for a panel of 16 European countries. The results show that the differences across countries depend on the critical values used: whereas the I (1) property of inflation is unclear with the asymptotic tests in some countries, the bootstrap version of Robinsons (1994) tests cannot reject the presence of a unit-root in inflation.


Archive | 2001

Testing for short and long-run causality: The case of the yield spread and economic growth

Jörg Breitung; Bertrand Candelon

To assess the predictive content of the interest rate term spread for future economic growth, we distinguish short-run from long-run predictability by using two different approaches. First, following Dufour and Renault (1998) a test procedure is proposed to test for causality at different forecast horizons. Second, the framework of Geweke (1982) and Hosaya (1991) is used to construct a simple test for causality in the frequency domain. This methodology is applied to investigate the predictive content of the yield spread for future output growth. For U.S. data we observe good leading indicator properties at frequencies around one year and typical business cycle frequencies. Using German data we found a (rather weak) predictability at low frequencies only.

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Michel Beine

University of Luxembourg

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Rabah Arezki

International Monetary Fund

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Katharina Raabe

International Food Policy Research Institute

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