| Literature DB >> 33828511 |
JianPing Hou1, Jingyi Liu1, YingJiang Jie1.
Abstract
The rapid worldwide spread of COVID-19 forced many countries to enforce complete lockdown and strict quarantine policies. The strict lockdown and quarantine affect the psychological state of people toward cryptocurrency. The current research aims to examine the effect of COVID-19 on Bitcoin prices concerning cumulative deaths and confirmed cases. The research comprises daily data from January 20, 2020, to April 30, 2020, during the initial worldwide breakout of COVID-19. This research employed the augmented Dickey-Fuller test to check the stationarity of data, the co-integration test for the interdependency of variables, and the vector error correction model for identifying the direction and long or short-run relationship between Bitcoin prices and COVID-19. The research results show that Bitcoin prices are negatively significant and related to COVID-19 in the short-run. A unidirectional relationship between Bitcoin prices and cumulative deaths is also observed. Investors and the public's psychological state were positively significant to Bitcoin prices in the long-term because of cashless transactions, unbanked, and less risky virus traveling. The second reason behind the positive psychological relation is un-centralization and easy-to-make payments by Bitcoin. This study's finding provides timely evidence to decision-makers on Bitcoin price volatility and its impacts on the public's psychological states regarding COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: Bitcoin prices; COVID-19; business sustainability; financial development; psychological state
Year: 2021 PMID: 33828511 PMCID: PMC8019715 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.647691
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Augmented Dickey-Fuller unit-root test.
| Stationarity test | Order of co-integration | |||
| Variables | Unit Root Test | Augmented Dickey-Fuller Test (Constant) | ADF | |
| ADF | ||||
| BTC | Level data | –0.8913 | 0.7855 | I (1) |
| 1st difference data | –9.4972 | 0.0000 | ||
| CD | Level data | –2.8088 | 0.0630 | I (1) |
| 1st difference data | –12.8842 | 0.0000 | ||
| CC | level data | 3.8711 | 1.0000 | I (1) |
| 1st difference data | –3.4710 | 0.0123 | ||
VAR Lag order selection criteria.
| Lag | Log L | LR | FPE | AIC | SC | HQ |
| 0 | −1723.89 | NA | 2.30E+18 | 50.79091 | 50.88883 | 50.82971 |
| 1 | −1448.13 | 519.0892 | 8.98E+14 | 42.94485 | 43.33653 | 43.10005 |
| 2 | −1435.03 | 23.49738 | 7.98E+14 | 42.82435 | 43.50979 | 43.09594 |
| 3 | −1381.96 | 90.53527* | 2.19e+14* | 41.52811* | 42.50730* | 41.91609* |
Unrestricted co-integration rank test (Maximum Eigenvalue).
| Hypothesized No. of CE(s) | Max-Eigen Statistic | Critical value (0.05) | Prob. |
| None* | 140.4974 | 21.13162 | 0.0001 |
| At most 1 | 14.87688 | 14.2646 | 0.04 |
| At most 2 | 0.199096 | 3.841466 | 0.6554 |
| Hypothesized No. of CE(s) | Trace Statistic | Critical value (0.05) | Prob. |
| None* | 155.5734 | 29.79707 | 0.0001 |
| At most 1 | 15.07598 | 15.49471 | 0.0577 |
| At most 2 | 0.199096 | 3.841466 | 0.6554 |
Co-integration test.
| 1 Co-integrating equation(s) | Log-likelihood -511.2092 | |
| BTC | Cumulative Deaths | Cumulative Cases |
| 1.000 | 180.8510 | −2.158967 |
| Standard Error | (−12.0147) | (−0.16688) |
Vector error correction estimates test.
| Error correction | Price | CD | CC | ECT |
| D(PRICE(−1)) | –0.0068 | –0.1814 | –0.0209 | |
| D(PRICE(−2)) | –0.0180 | –1.1179 | ||
| D(CD (−1)) | 6.6845 | −171.8432* | 0.0148* | |
| D(CD(−2)) | 2.6652 | −10.0428* | ||
| D(CC(−1)) | –0.0708 | 0.0491* | 0.5549* | |
| D(CC(−2)) | –0.0272 | 0.0315 | ||
| C | –86.2452 | −8.8489* | −612.879* |
Granger causality test.
| Direction of causality | Observations | F-Statistics | Prob. |
| Cumulative deaths does not granger cause price | 69 | 0.6469 | 0.6922 |
| Price does not granger cause cumulative deaths | 2.9497** | 0.0149 | |
| Cumulative cases does not granger cause price | 69 | 0.7078 | 0.6447 |
| Price does not granger cause cumulative cases | 2.3919** | 0.0408 | |
| Cumulative cases does not granger cause cumulative deaths | 69 | 87.7901* | 2.00E-25 |
| Cumulative deaths does not granger cause cumulative cases | 73.4563* | 1.00E-23 |