Volume 24, Issue 6 pp. 803-813
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International Stock Market Efficiency and Integration: A Study of Eighteen Nations

Kam C. Chan

Kam C. Chan

Associate Professor of Finance, School of Business and Technology, University of Wisconsin-Parkside,

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Benton E. Gup

Benton E. Gup

Banking Chair and Professor of Finance, University of Alabama,

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Ming-Shiun Pan

Ming-Shiun Pan

Professor of Finance, Department of Finance, Management Science and Information Systems, Shippensburg University

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First published: 04 March 2003
Citations: 144

Abstract

This study examines the relationships among stock prices in eighteen national stock markets by using unit root and cointegration tests for the period 1961--92. All the markets were analyzed individually and collectively in regions to test for market efficiency. The results from unit root tests suggest that the world equity markets are weak-form efficient. The cointegration test results show that there are only a small number of significant cointegrating vectors over the last three decades. However, the number of significant cointegrating vectors increases after the October 1987 stock market crash, a result that is consistent with the contagion effect.

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