The power play: Geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance

In this era of globalization, emerging markets have become more closely linked with global trade and capital flows, make it high growth potential but also heightened vulnerability to external shocks. Geopolitical risks are particularly important due to unpredictability and the absence of standard po...

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Main Authors: Chin, Wei Jian, Ng, Qiao Wen, Ning, Yu Jie, Tan, Cal Ven
Format: Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7069/1/2105310_FYP.pdf
http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7069/
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author Chin, Wei Jian
Ng, Qiao Wen
Ning, Yu Jie
Tan, Cal Ven
author_facet Chin, Wei Jian
Ng, Qiao Wen
Ning, Yu Jie
Tan, Cal Ven
author_sort Chin, Wei Jian
building UTAR Library
collection Institutional Repository
content_provider Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman
content_source UTAR Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
description In this era of globalization, emerging markets have become more closely linked with global trade and capital flows, make it high growth potential but also heightened vulnerability to external shocks. Geopolitical risks are particularly important due to unpredictability and the absence of standard policy tools for mitigation. This study investigates the effect of disaggregated geopolitical risk categories, geopolitical threats and acts, and the global GPR index on sectoral and overall stock market volatility in Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines. Using quarterly data from 2012Q1 to 2024Q3, OLS estimation is applied with control variables such as foreign portfolio investment, lagged volatility, and market portfolio. Diagnostic tests such as normality, heteroscedasticity, and serial correlation tests are conducted to ensure the reliability and accuracy of the results. The regression results indicate that the majority of disaggregated GPR categories show statistically insignificant relationship with sectoral and overall volatility across the three markets. Only limited significant results are observed in this study, suggesting that geopolitical risks exert weaker and less systematic effects in ASEAN emerging markets compared to global evidence. Lastly, this study contributes to the literature by providing comparative sectoral evidence for ASEAN economies, offering insights for investors and academic researchers as well as deepen understanding of the complex linkages between geopolitical risks and sectoral stock market volatility. Keywords: geopolitical risk; sectoral stock market volatility; Malaysia, Thailand, Philippines; foreign portfolio investment; ordinary least squares Subject Area: HB135-147 Mathematical economics Subject Area: HG4538 Foreign investments
format Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis
id my-utar-eprints.7069
institution Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman
publishDate 2025
record_format eprints
spelling my-utar-eprints.70692025-12-30T14:27:18Z The power play: Geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance Chin, Wei Jian Ng, Qiao Wen Ning, Yu Jie Tan, Cal Ven HB Economic Theory HG Finance In this era of globalization, emerging markets have become more closely linked with global trade and capital flows, make it high growth potential but also heightened vulnerability to external shocks. Geopolitical risks are particularly important due to unpredictability and the absence of standard policy tools for mitigation. This study investigates the effect of disaggregated geopolitical risk categories, geopolitical threats and acts, and the global GPR index on sectoral and overall stock market volatility in Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines. Using quarterly data from 2012Q1 to 2024Q3, OLS estimation is applied with control variables such as foreign portfolio investment, lagged volatility, and market portfolio. Diagnostic tests such as normality, heteroscedasticity, and serial correlation tests are conducted to ensure the reliability and accuracy of the results. The regression results indicate that the majority of disaggregated GPR categories show statistically insignificant relationship with sectoral and overall volatility across the three markets. Only limited significant results are observed in this study, suggesting that geopolitical risks exert weaker and less systematic effects in ASEAN emerging markets compared to global evidence. Lastly, this study contributes to the literature by providing comparative sectoral evidence for ASEAN economies, offering insights for investors and academic researchers as well as deepen understanding of the complex linkages between geopolitical risks and sectoral stock market volatility. Keywords: geopolitical risk; sectoral stock market volatility; Malaysia, Thailand, Philippines; foreign portfolio investment; ordinary least squares Subject Area: HB135-147 Mathematical economics Subject Area: HG4538 Foreign investments 2025-06 Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7069/1/2105310_FYP.pdf Chin, Wei Jian and Ng, Qiao Wen and Ning, Yu Jie and Tan, Cal Ven (2025) The power play: Geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance. Final Year Project, UTAR. http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7069/
spellingShingle HB Economic Theory
HG Finance
Chin, Wei Jian
Ng, Qiao Wen
Ning, Yu Jie
Tan, Cal Ven
The power play: Geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance
title The power play: Geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance
title_full The power play: Geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance
title_fullStr The power play: Geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance
title_full_unstemmed The power play: Geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance
title_short The power play: Geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance
title_sort power play: geopolitical influence on emerging market stock performance
topic HB Economic Theory
HG Finance
url http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7069/1/2105310_FYP.pdf
http://eprints.utar.edu.my/7069/
url_provider http://eprints.utar.edu.my