Volatility Spillovers in China's Real Estate Crisis: A Network Approach
Julia Manso

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the evolving interconnectedness of Chinese real estate firms during the crisis using a network approach, revealing regional and ownership-based differences in market sentiment and spillovers over time.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of network analysis to measure time-varying connectedness in real estate stock volatilities during a crisis, filling a gap in understanding regional and ownership effects.
Findings
Connectedness increased after policy implementation.
Regional differences influenced spillover patterns.
Market homogeneity decreased over time.
Abstract
Sentiment towards the Chinese real estate sector has deteriorated following the introduction of financing constraints in 2020 with the ''three red lines." Forcing developers to restructure their debt, the policy triggered a cascade of financing troubles, defaults, and reduced housing demand, ultimately culminating in a prolonged real estate crisis. This paper utilizes a network approach in line with Demirer et al. (2018) and Diebold and Yilmaz (2014) to measure daily time-varying connectedness in the stock return volatilities of major Chinese real estate developers throughout the crisis. Focusing on spillover between companies as reflected by market perception, this paper examines how connectedness evolves over time across firms with different regional exposures and state-ownership statuses, filling a gap in the literature to elucidate where property demand and real estate firm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHousing Market and Economics · Banking stability, regulation, efficiency · Housing, Finance, and Neoliberalism
