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Cross-Market Risk Contagion Identification

Cross-market risk contagion identification covers spillover mechanisms, lead-lag signals, and concrete indicators to detect risk transmission across markets.

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Cross-Market Risk Contagion Identification

Risk does not stay in the market where it starts. A bond selloff transmits to equities, a currency crash transmits to commodities, a single bank failure transmits to credit markets globally. Contagion is the mechanism by which a localized shock becomes a portfolio-wide loss. Identifying it early is the difference between reducing risk and riding it down.

Transmission mechanisms

Contagion spreads through four channels:

  1. Common factor exposure — multiple markets share a driver (rates, dollar, risk appetite). When the driver moves, all exposed markets move together.
  2. Liquidity channel — a fund facing losses in one market sells liquid assets in others to raise cash. This is why Treasuries sometimes sell off alongside equities in a panic.
  3. Collateral channel — falling asset values reduce collateral value, forcing deleveraging that sells other assets.
  4. Psychological channel — fear in one market reduces risk appetite globally.

Lead-lag indicators

Some markets lead others. Monitor these transmission paths:

  • VIX → credit spreads: equity vol typically leads HY credit spreads by 1–3 days.
  • USD → emerging markets and commodities: a surging dollar transmits to EM equities and commodities within hours.
  • Sovereign CDS → bank stocks: rising sovereign default risk hits domestic banks first.
  • Base metals → commodity currencies: copper and iron ore lead AUD, CAD with a 1–2 day lag.
  • Crypto → risk appetite: large crypto drawdowns have led risk-off moves in growth equities during 2022.

Concrete detection indicators

Track these daily; rising values signal contagion building:

  • Cross-market rolling correlation: 30-day correlation across equities, bonds, credit, FX, commodities. Above 0.6 = stress.
  • VIX term structure: front month above second month (inversion) signals acute stress.
  • HY-OAS spread: high-yield option-adjusted spread widening 50bp in a week signals credit stress transmitting.
  • Cross-asset dispersion: when dispersion collapses (everything moving together), diversification is failing.
  • Funding stress: FX swap basis widening, repo rates spiking — funding stress transmits to every leveraged position.

The portfolio response

When contagion indicators trigger, the response is to reduce gross exposure, not to predict the direction. Specific actions:

  • Cross-market correlation above 0.6 for 5 days: cut gross exposure 20%.
  • HY spreads widen 100bp from recent low: cut risk-on positions 30%.
  • VIX inversion: move to flat or defensive for 1 week.
  • Funding stress signal: deleverage to 1× gross immediately; funding crises move in hours, not days.

The trap to avoid

Do not wait for confirmation. By the time contagion is obvious in your PnL, the cheap exits are gone. The indicators above are early signals; acting on them feels premature because most trigger without a follow-through crisis. That is the cost — false alarms — in exchange for not being in the portfolio when the real crisis arrives.

Contagion is why "diversified" portfolios fail together. Monitoring transmission is the only defense, because the diversification you measured last quarter has already decayed by the time it matters.

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Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk