When volatility turns, recessions follow

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Economic Modelling (ISSN: 0264-9993)

Abstract

Do shifts into high stock-market volatility foreshadow recessions rather than merely accompany them? Prior work shows volatility rises in downturns and can help short-horizon forecasts, but the timing of discrete volatility regime changes relative to business-cycle turning points is less understood. Using quarterly data for the United States, United Kingdom, Japan, Germany, Italy, and France (1960–2019; country-specific start dates), we estimate a bivariate Markov-switching model that jointly classifies high/low output growth and high/low return volatility, and tests restrictions on the transition structure. In the United States, United Kingdom, Japan, and France, entry into the high-volatility state typically precedes recession onset by one to two quarters. For Germany and Italy, the output and volatility state processes are approximately independent. These results suggest that volatility-regime switches are a medium-horizon early-warning signal, consistent with uncertainty and risk-premium repricing that tighten funding conditions in more market-based financial systems.

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Keywords

Actividad bancaria y financiera, Mercado Financiero, Banking and financial activity, Financial markets

Citation

Citation

Ricordi, D., Sola, M., Spagnolo, F., & Spagnolo, N. (2026). When volatility turns, recessions follow. Economic Modelling, 159, 107588. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.econmod.2026.107588

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