This paper investigates the connection between energy uncertainty and banking credit risk within the Eurozone. To analyze this relationship, we first apply a Bayesian time-varying VAR model to examine how shocks in energy uncertainty influence financial risk. Next, we use the impulse response function to assess how these shocks propagate through the banking sector. Further, long-run Granger causality is employed to investigate the causal pathways of shock transmission. Our empirical findings show clear patterns: banking credit risk increases in response to energy uncertainty shocks. Over time, these shocks show a progressively rising impact on credit risk, highlighting the growing influence of energy uncertainty on the spread of financial risk.
Spillover effects between energy uncertainty and financial risk in the Eurozone banking sector
Vincenzo Pacelli;Caterina Di Tommaso;Matteo Foglia;Maria Melania Povia
2025-01-01
Abstract
This paper investigates the connection between energy uncertainty and banking credit risk within the Eurozone. To analyze this relationship, we first apply a Bayesian time-varying VAR model to examine how shocks in energy uncertainty influence financial risk. Next, we use the impulse response function to assess how these shocks propagate through the banking sector. Further, long-run Granger causality is employed to investigate the causal pathways of shock transmission. Our empirical findings show clear patterns: banking credit risk increases in response to energy uncertainty shocks. Over time, these shocks show a progressively rising impact on credit risk, highlighting the growing influence of energy uncertainty on the spread of financial risk.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


