Analysing Volatility Persistence in the Nairobi Securities Exchange: The Role of Exchange and Interest Rates

  • Edwin Moyo Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Mulungushi University, Kabwe, Zambia; Department of Statistics, University of Botswana, Gaborone, Botswana
  • Stanley Jere Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Mulungushi University, Kabwe, Zambia
  • Christian Kasumo Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Mulungushi University, Kabwe, Zambia
  • Peter Chidiebere Nwokolo Department of Mathematics, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Nigeria
  • Anthony Mulinge Department of Economics and Statistics, KCA University, Nairobi, Kenya
  • Clement Mwaanga Department of Business Studies, Mulungushi University, Kabwe, Zambia
  • Wamulume Mushala Department of Business Studies, Mulungushi University, Kabwe, Zambia
Keywords: Stock return, Volatility, Macroeconomic variables, Asymmetric GARCH models, Leverage effect

Abstract

In this paper, the main objective was to analyse the influence of exchange and interest rates on volatility persistence using asymmetric GARCH models (EGARCH and TGARCH) on NSE data. The analysis of the relationship between stock return volatility, exchange, and interest rates on volatility persistence was performed using the models ARMA (1, 2) -EGARCH (1,1) and ARMA (1, 2) -TGARCH (1,1) under the student t distribution and the generalised error distribution assumption using the NSE daily 20-share price index, interest rates, and exchange rates from 02/01/2015 to 31/12/2024 accounting for 3106 observations. The degree of persistence in the conditional variance equations slightly increased for the ARMA(1,2)-TGARCH(1,1) model and there was a slight reduction for the ARMA(1,2)-EGARCH(1,1) with the inclusion of interest rate and exchange rate which was consistent regardless of the error term distribution assumption. Generally, information shocks increase volatility persistence, and negative shocks have a greater impact than positive shocks. The coefficient of the exchange rate ($\delta_2$) is positive and statistically significant for ARMA (1,2)-TGARCH (1,1). Hence, we deduce that the volatility in the NSE can be explained by the exchange rate, and there exists a positive relationship. Therefore, it is evident that stock returns are positively related to changes in exchange rates. The government should implement policy measures to control the exchange rate, such as real-time disclosure of financial information, trading volumes, and corporate actions, as these affect stock returns.
Published
2025-09-26
How to Cite
Moyo, E., Jere, S., Kasumo, C., Nwokolo, P. C., Mulinge, A., Mwaanga, C., & Mushala, W. (2025). Analysing Volatility Persistence in the Nairobi Securities Exchange: The Role of Exchange and Interest Rates. Statistics, Optimization & Information Computing, 14(6), 3012-3025. https://doi.org/10.19139/soic-2310-5070-2480
Section
Research Articles