“…The primary focus is on understanding and estimating the linkage of two or more financial markets while recent studies on co-movement analysis have focused on the combinations of stock prices on one hand and commodity prices, exchange rates or equity markets on the other (see Antoniou, Pescetto, & Violaris, 2003;Bartram, Taylor, & Wang, 2007;Bhar & Hammoudeh, 2011;Kim, Moshirian, & Wu, 2006;Lin, 2012;Martens & Poon, 2001;Savva, 2009;Wahab, 2012). Specifically, studies with methodologies similar to our study; Erdogan and Schmidbauer (2005) for currency and stock markets, Chiang, Jeon, and Li (2007) for a number of Asian stock markets, Li and Zou (2008) for Chinese capital markets (bond vs. stock markets), Savva, Osborn, and Gill (2009) for US and European stock markets, Lin, Menkveld, and Yang (2009) for Chinese and Western capital markets, Aslanidis, Osborn, and Sensier (2010) for US and UK capital markets, and Syllignakis and Kouretas (2011) for Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), US, German and Russian stock markets, have all remarked that the markets in question experienced a process of co-movement in varying degrees.…”