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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Approximating volatility diffusions of the term structure by using ARCH model

Wu, Jia-Huei 26 June 2007 (has links)
none
32

Asymmetrie und langes Gedächtnis in Kapitalmarktdaten : Modellierung von Renditen mit GARCH-Modellen /

Schoffer, Olaf, January 2007 (has links)
Zugl.: Dortmund, Univ., Diss., 2003.
33

Changes in Beliefs across Assets Options and Underlyings /

Miremad, Alexandre. January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Master-Arbeit Univ. St. Gallen, 2006.
34

The GARCH-EVT-Copula model and simulation in scenario-based asset allocation

McEwan, Peter Gareth Fredric January 2016 (has links)
Financial market integration, in particular, portfolio allocations from advanced economies to South African markets, continues to strengthen volatility linkages and quicken volatility transmissions between participating markets. Largely as a result, South African portfolios are net recipients of returns and volatility shocks emanating from major world markets. In light of these, and other, sources of risk, this dissertation proposes a methodology to improve risk management systems in funds by building a contemporary asset allocation framework that offers practitioners an opportunity to explicitly model combinations of hypothesised global risks and the effects on their investments. The framework models portfolio return variables and their key risk driver variables separately and then joins them to model their combined dependence structure. The separate modelling of univariate and multivariate (MV) components admits the benefit of capturing the data generating processes with improved accuracy. Univariate variables were modelled using ARMA-GARCH-family structures paired with a variety of skewed and leptokurtic conditional distributions. Model residuals were fit using the Peaks-over-Threshold method from Extreme Value Theory for the tails and a non-parametric, kernel density for the interior, forming a completed semi-parametric distribution (SPD) for each variable. Asset and risk factor returns were then combined and their dependence structure jointly modelled with a MV Student t copula. Finally, the SPD margins and Student t copula were used to construct a MV meta t distribution. Monte Carlo simulations were generated from the fitted MV meta t distribution on which an out-of-sample test was conducted. The 2014-to-2015 horizon served to proxy as an out-of-sample, forward-looking scenario for a set of key risk factors against which a hypothetical, diversified portfolio was optimised. Traditional mean-variance and contemporary mean-CVaR optimisation techniques were used and their results compared. As an addendum, performance over the in-sample 2008 financial crisis was reported. The final Objective (7) addressed management and conservation strategies for the NMBM. The NMBM wetland database that was produced during this research is currently being used by the Municipality and will be added to the latest National Wetland Map. From the database, and tools developed in this research, approximately 90 wetlands have been identified as being highly vulnerable due to anthropogenic and environmental factors (Chapter 6) and should be earmarked as key conservation priority areas. Based on field experience and data collected, this study has also made conservation and rehabilitation recommendations for eight locations. Recommendations are also provided for six more wetland systems (or regions) that should be prioritised for further research, as these systems lack fundamental information on where the threat of anthropogenic activities affecting them is greatest. This study has made a significant contribution to understanding the underlying geomorphological processes in depressions, seeps and wetland flats. The desktop mapping component of this study illustrated the dominance of wetlands in the wetter parts of the Municipality. Perched wetland systems were identified in the field, on shallow bedrock, calcrete or clay. The prevalence of these perches in depressions, seeps and wetland flats also highlighted the importance of rainfall in driving wetland formation, by allowing water to pool on these perches, in the NMBM. These perches are likely to be a key factor in the high number of small, ephemeral wetlands that were observed in the study area, compared to other semi-arid regions. Therefore, this research highlights the value of multi-faceted and multi-scalar wetland research and how similar approaches should be used in future research methods has been highlighted. The approach used, along with the tools/methods developed in this study have facilitated the establishment of priority areas for conservation and management within the NMBM. Furthermore, the research approach has revealed emergent wetland properties that are only apparent when looking at different spatial scales. This research has highlighted the complex biological and geomorphological interactions between wetlands that operate over various spatial and temporal scales. As such, wetland management should occur across a wetland complex, rather than individual sites, to account for these multi-scalar influences.
35

DCC-GARCH Estimation / Utvärdering av DCC-GARCH

Nordström, Christofer January 2021 (has links)
When modelling more that one asset, it is desirable to apply multivariate modeling to capture the co-movements of the underlying assets. The GARCH models has been proven to be successful when it comes to volatility forecast- ing. Hence it is natural to extend from a univariate GARCH model to a multivariate GARCH model when examining portfolio volatility. This study aims to evaluate a specific multivariate GARCH model, the DCC-GARCH model, which was developed by Engle and Sheppard in 2001. In this pa- per different DCC-GARCH models have been implemented, assuming both Gaussian and multivariate Student’s t distribution. These distributions are compared by a set of tests as well as Value at Risk backtesting. / I portföljanalys så är det åtråvärt att applicera flerdimensionella modeller för att kunna fånga hur de olika tillgångarna rör sig tillsammans. GARCH-modeller har visat sig vara framgångsrika när det kommer till prognoser av volatilitet. Det är därför naturligt att gå från endimensionella till flerdimensionella GARCH-modeller när volatiliteten av en portfölj skall utvärderas. Den här studien ämnar att utvärdera tillvägagångssättet för prognoser av en viss typ av flerdimensionell GARCH-modell, DCC-GARCH-modellen, vilken utvecklades av Engle och Sheppard 2001. I den här uppsatsen har olika DCC-GARCH modeller blivit implementerade, som antar innovationer enligt både flerdimensionell normalfördelning samt flerdimensionell student's t-fördelning. Dessa jämförs med hjälp av en handfull tester samt Value-at-Risk backtesting.
36

Forecasting Oil Price Volatility

Sharma, Namit 12 June 1998 (has links)
This study compares different methods of forecasting price volatility in the crude oil futures market using daily data for the period November 1986 through March 1997. It compares the forward-looking implied volatility measure with two backward-looking time-series measures based on past returns - a simple historical volatility estimator and a set of estimators based on the Generalized Autoregressive Conditional Heteroscedasticity (GARCH) class of models. Tests for the relative information content of implied volatilities vis-à-vis GARCH time series models are conducted within-sample by estimating nested conditional variance equations with returns information and implied volatilities as explanatory variables. Likelihood ratio tests indicate that both implied volatilities and past returns contribute volatility information. The study also checks for and confirms that the conditional Generalized Error Distribution (GED) better describes fat-tailed returns in the crude oil market as compared to the conditional normal distribution. Out-of-sample forecasts of volatility using the GARCH GED model, implied volatility, and historical volatility are compared with realized volatility over two-week and four-week horizons to determine forecast accuracy. Forecasts are also evaluated for predictive power by regressing realized volatility on the forecasts. GARCH forecasts, though superior to historical volatility, do not perform as well as implied volatility over the two-week horizon. In the four-week case, historical volatility outperforms both of the other measures. Tests of relative information content show that for both forecast horizons, a combination of implied volatility and historical volatility leaves little information to be added by the GARCH model. / Master of Arts
37

Modelování ve finanční analýze / Modelování ve finanční analýze

Maďar, Milan January 2012 (has links)
In this thesis we study the regional and global linkages as evidence of markets integration of the stock markets in Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Prague the U.S. and the dynamics of volatility transmission of related foreign exchange rates using multivariate GARCH approach. For each of the model classes, a theoretical review, basic properties and estimation procedure are provided. We illustrate approach by applying the models to daily market data. Our two main aims are discussing and report the existence of regional and global stock markets linkages and provide comparison of such multivariate GARCH models on the data sample. We find out that the estimated time-varying conditional correlations indicate limited integration among the markets which implies that investors can benefit from the risk reduction by investigating in the different stock markets especially during the crisis.
38

Asset price and volatility forecasting using news sentiment

Sadik, Zryan January 2018 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to show that news analytics data can be utilised to improve the predictive ability of existing models that have useful roles in a variety of financial applications. The modified models are computationally efficient and perform far better than the existing ones. The new modified models offer a reasonable compromise between increased model complexity and prediction accuracy. I have investigated the impact of news sentiment on volatility of stock returns. The GARCH model is one of the most common models used for predicting asset price volatility from the return time series. In this research, I have considered quantified news sentiment as a second source of information and its impact on the movement of asset prices, which is used together with the asset time series data to predict the volatility of asset price returns. Comprehensive numerical experiments demonstrate that the new proposed volatility models provide superior prediction than the "plain vanilla" GARCH, TGARCH and EGARCH models. This research presents evidence that including news sentiment term as an exogenous variable in the GARCH framework improves the prediction power of the model. The analysis of this study suggested that the use of an exponential decay function is good when the news flow is frequent, whereas the Hill decay function is good only when there are scheduled announcements. The numerical results vindicate some recent findings regarding the utility of news sentiment as a predictor of volatility, and also vindicate the utility of the new models combining the proxies for past news sentiments and the past asset price returns. The empirical analysis suggested that news augmented GARCH models can be very useful in estimating VaR and implementing risk management strategies. Another direction of my research is introducing a new approach to construct a commodity futures pricing model. This study proposed a new method of incorporating macroeconomic news into a predictive model for forecasting prices of crude oil futures contracts. Since these futures contracts are iii iv more liquid than the underlying commodity itself, accurate forecasting of their prices is of great value to multiple categories of market participants. The Kalman filtering framework for forecasting arbitrage-free (futures) prices was utilized, and it is assumed that the volatility of oil (futures) price is influenced by macroeconomic news. The impact of quantified news sentiment on the price volatility is modelled through a parametrized, nonlinear functional map. This approach is motivated by the successful use of a similar model structure in my earlier work, for predicting individual stock volatility using stock-specific news. Numerical experiments with real data illustrate that this new model performs better than the one factor model in terms of accuracy of predictive power as well as goodness of fit to the data. The proposed model structure for incorporating macroeconomic news together with historical (market) data is novel and improves the accuracy of price prediction quite significantly.
39

A Study on GARCH volatility processes in pricing derivatives

Wang, Yizhe January 2017 (has links)
In this thesis the GARCH models are applied to evaluate financial options and futures. In the first application, the GARCH models in parsimonious form are studied for pricing the S&P500 options. Unlike previous studies that focus on developed formulation, the results indicate that simplified models provide effective performance and it is the simple GARCH model that yields the least valuation error. To our consideration, examining model possessing simplification is of practical importance because model estimation becomes readily accessible through available econometric software, which circumvent programming barriers in implementing alternative one’s own pricing methods. The second application consider the component GARCH models for currency option pricing. The valuation results favour the component formulations particularly in the pricing of long term contracts. Volatility modelling results indicate that the return-volatility relationship is symmetric in the long run, but over the short term asymmetry also arises in the EURUSD and GBPUSD exchange rates. The third application evaluates canola futures in Canada in relation to spot market price. Results confirm the cointegrating relationship with threshold corresponding to transaction and adjustment cost. And it is the futures market that adjusts actively to price disparities but in the meantime there is volatility spillover from futures to the spot market. Overall, our empirical assessments indicate the importance of the time varying volatility and the improvements achieved in option pricing and futures evaluation. We believe the present study’s analysis provides useful suggestions and further guidance to practitioners and investors for the pricing and trading in the equity and foreign exchange markets, also to the market agents to better evaluate price uncertainty in order to guard against adverse price changes.
40

Modelos univariados e multivariados para cálculo do Valor-em-Risco de um portifólio / Multivariate and Univariate Models for Forecasting a Portfolio\'s Value-at-Risk

Fava, Renato Fadel 19 April 2010 (has links)
Este trabalho consiste em um estudo comparativo de diversos modelos para cálculo do Valor em Risco de um portifólio. São comparados modelos que consideram a série univariada de log-retornos do portifólio versus mo- delos multivariados, que consideram as séries de log-retornos de cada ativo que compõe o portifólio e suas correlações condicionais. Além disso, são testados modelo propostos recentemente, que possuem pouca literatura a respeito, como o PS-GARCH e o VARMA-GARCH. Também propomos um novo modelo, que utiliza o resultado acumulado do portifólio nos últimos dias como variável exógena. Os diferentes modelos são avaliados em termos de sua adequação às exigëncias do Acordo de Basileia e seu impacto financeiro, em um período que inclui épocas de alta volatilidade. De forma geral, não foram notadas grandes diferenças de performance entre modelos univariados e multivariados. Os modelos mais complexos mostraram-se mais eficientes, produzindo resultados satisfatórios inclusive em tempos de crise. / The present work consists of a comparative study of several portfolio Value-at-Risk models. Univariate models, which consider only the portfolio log-returns series, are compared to multivariate models, which consider the log-returns series of each asset individually and their conditional correlations. Additionally, recently proposed models such as PS-GARCH and VARMA-GARCH are tested. We also propose a new model that uses past cumulative returns as exogenous variables. All models are evaluated in terms of their compliance to Basel Accord and financial impact, in period that includes high volatility times. In general, univariate and multivariate models performed similarly. More complex models yielded more accurate results, with satisfactory performance including in crisis periods.

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