Stocks and bonds: Flight-to-safety for ever?

•This paper provides new insights about flight-to-safety from stocks to bonds in the U.S. market.•The link between the strength of flight-to-safety and the levels of bonds’ yields is explored.•We find that this strength decreases when U.S. government bonds’ yields are low.•We also evidence a flight-...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of international money and finance Vol. 95; pp. 27 - 43
Main Authors Boucher, Christophe, Tokpavi, Sessi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.07.2019
Elsevier
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Summary:•This paper provides new insights about flight-to-safety from stocks to bonds in the U.S. market.•The link between the strength of flight-to-safety and the levels of bonds’ yields is explored.•We find that this strength decreases when U.S. government bonds’ yields are low.•We also evidence a flight-to-safety transfer that is more pronounced in low-yield environment.•This transfer is materialized by an increase in the flight-to-safety from stocks to gold and safe haven currencies. This paper gives new insights about flight-to-safety from stocks to bonds, asking whether the strength of this phenomenon remains the same in the current environment of low yields. The motivations lie in the conjecture that when yields are low, the traditional motives of flight-to-safety (wealth protection, liquidity) could not be sufficient, inducing weaker flight-to-safety events. Empirical applications using data for U.S. government bonds and the S&P 500 index, show indeed that when yields are low, the strength of flight-to-safety from stocks to bonds weakens. This result holds, even when controlling for the effects of traditional flight-to-safety factors including the VIX, the TED spreads and the overall level of illiquidity in the stock market. Moreover, we develop a bivariate model of flight-to-safety transfers that measures to what extent the strength of flight-to-safety from stocks to bonds is related to the strength of flight-to-safety from stocks to other safe haven assets (gold and currencies). Results show that when the strength of flight-to-safety from stocks to bonds decreases the strength of flight-to-safety from stocks to these safe haven assets increases. This result holds only in the low-yield environment, suggesting a kind of substitution effect of save haven assets, similar to the reaching for yield behavior.
ISSN:0261-5606
1873-0639
DOI:10.1016/j.jimonfin.2019.03.002