Immune Or Vulnerable? African Stock Markets’ Response To U.S.–China Trade Wars And Geopolitical Tensions
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Future Business Journal
Abstract
This study examines the dynamic impact of the U.S.–China trade war and geopolitical risks on African stock mar
ket returns. Using Wavelet Coherence analysis and the Quantile Vector Autoregression (QVAR) model, we capture
both time–frequency dynamics and regime-specific connectedness. Drawing on data from seven major African stock
exchanges, Geopolitical Risk (GPRI) and U.S.–China Trade Tension (UCTI) indices from January 2007 to February 2024,
the results reveal that African markets are not immune but exhibit state-dependent vulnerability. During calm market
conditions, trade tensions dominate as the main shock transmitter, whereas geopolitical risks become more influential
in crisis periods. The Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) emerges as a key transmitter of shocks, while the Nigerian
Exchange (NGX) remains the largest receiver. These findings underscore the need for targeted regional risk manage
ment and coordinated policy responses to enhance Africa’s financial resilience against external shocks.
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Research Article
Citation
Korsah, D., & Kwadwo Danso, S. (2025). Immune or vulnerable? African stock markets’ response to US–China trade wars and geopolitical tensions. Future Business Journal, 11(1), 1-17.
