ArXiv TLDR

Can Institutional Integration of Western Balkans Stock Exchanges Strengthen Monetary Transmission?

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2604.18330

Stefan Tanevski

econ.GN

TLDR

Integrating Western Balkan stock exchanges significantly amplifies monetary policy transmission through asset prices, doubling the impact of tightening.

Key contributions

  • Developed a two-stage counterfactual framework to assess stock market integration's impact on monetary transmission.
  • Simulated an integrated Western Balkan stock exchange, benchmarking to the Baltic OMX merger.
  • Found that integration systematically amplifies monetary policy transmission through asset prices.
  • Equity valuations fall twice as strongly under integration following a 100bp policy tightening.

Why it matters

This paper addresses persistent segmentation in Western Balkan capital markets. It provides crucial evidence that institutional integration can significantly strengthen monetary policy effectiveness, offering valuable insights for policymakers in small open economies aiming for financial stability.

Original Abstract

This paper asks how institutional stock-market integration reshapes the transmission of monetary policy through asset prices in small open economies. Motivated by the persistent segmentation of Western Balkan capital markets, we develop a two-stage counterfactual transmission framework to identify how stock-exchange consolidation would alter the elasticity of market valuations to monetary shocks. First, a synthetic-control simulation constructs a counterfactual integrated Western Balkan stock exchange comprising Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia, and Serbia, benchmarked to the Baltic OMX merger, thereby quantifying the structural valuation gains of institutional integration. Second, we identify exogenous monetary-policy innovations using a Taylor-rule framework augmented with inflation and output forecasts and reserve adjustments. These shocks are then embedded within a Local-Projections estimator à la Jordà (2005) to trace the dynamic responses of market capitalisation under fragmented and integrated market regimes. The results point to a systematic amplification of monetary-policy transmission through the asset-price channel once markets are unified. Following a policy tightening of about 100 basis points, equity valuations fall roughly twice as strongly under integration than under fragmented markets. Additionally, we find that integration alters the sensitivity of monetary transmission itself: the initial pass-through intensifies, but its marginal responsiveness to further integration declines over time, signalling the consolidation of a new steady-state regime.

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