The Impact of Oil Shocks on Sovereign Default Risk
The paper examines the impact of oil shocks on sovereign credit default swaps (CDS) for the G10 countries and major oil-exporting countries. The results show that oil demand shocks have a uniformly negative impact on CDS spreads. In contrast, oil s...
| Main Authors: | , | 
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| Format: | Working Paper | 
| Language: | English | 
| Published: | 
        
      World Bank, Washington, DC    
    
      2021
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/289701613502786051/The-Impact-of-Oil-Shocks-on-Sovereign-Default-Risk http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35142  | 
| Summary: | The paper examines the impact of oil
            shocks on sovereign credit default swaps (CDS) for the G10
            countries and major oil-exporting countries. The results
            show that oil demand shocks have a uniformly negative impact
            on CDS spreads. In contrast, oil supply shocks increase the
            spreads of the G10 countries, but reduce the spreads of
            oil-exporting countries. Using quantile regressions, the
            findings show that oil demand shocks affect spreads across
            the conditional distribution, while oil supply shocks mostly
            influence the upper quantiles of spread changes.
            Furthermore, a two-state Markov-switching modeling confirms
            a significant non-linearity in the impact of oil shocks. | 
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