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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.
11

Measuring, Modeling, and Forecasting Volatility and Correlations from High-Frequency Data

Vander Elst, Harry-Paul 20 May 2016 (has links)
This dissertation contains four essays that all share a common purpose: developing new methodologies to exploit the potential of high-frequency data for the measurement, modeling and forecasting of financial assets volatility and correlations. The first two chapters provide useful tools for univariate applications while the last two chapters develop multivariate methodologies. In chapter 1, we introduce a new class of univariate volatility models named FloGARCH models. FloGARCH models provide a parsimonious joint model for low frequency returns and realized measures, and are sufficiently flexible to capture long memory as well as asymmetries related to leverage effects. We analyze the performances of the models in a realistic numerical study and on the basis of a data set composed of 65 equities. Using more than 10 years of high-frequency transactions, we document significant statistical gains related to the FloGARCH models in terms of in-sample fit, out-of-sample fit and forecasting accuracy compared to classical and Realized GARCH models. In chapter 2, using 12 years of high-frequency transactions for 55 U.S. stocks, we argue that combining low-frequency exogenous economic indicators with high-frequency financial data improves the ability of conditionally heteroskedastic models to forecast the volatility of returns, their full multi-step ahead conditional distribution and the multi-period Value-at-Risk. Using a refined version of the Realized LGARCH model allowing for time-varying intercept and implemented with realized kernels, we document that nominal corporate profits and term spreads have strong long-run predictive ability and generate accurate risk measures forecasts over long-horizon. The results are based on several loss functions and tests, including the Model Confidence Set. Chapter 3 is a joint work with David Veredas. We study the class of disentangled realized estimators for the integrated covariance matrix of Brownian semimartingales with finite activity jumps. These estimators separate correlations and volatilities. We analyze different combinations of quantile- and median-based realized volatilities, and four estimators of realized correlations with three synchronization schemes. Their finite sample properties are studied under four data generating processes, in presence, or not, of microstructure noise, and under synchronous and asynchronous trading. The main finding is that the pre-averaged version of disentangled estimators based on Gaussian ranks (for the correlations) and median deviations (for the volatilities) provide a precise, computationally efficient, and easy alternative to measure integrated covariances on the basis of noisy and asynchronous prices. Along these lines, a minimum variance portfolio application shows the superiority of this disentangled realized estimator in terms of numerous performance metrics. Chapter 4 is co-authored with Niels S. Hansen, Asger Lunde and Kasper V. Olesen, all affiliated with CREATES at Aarhus University. We propose to use the Realized Beta GARCH model to exploit the potential of high-frequency data in commodity markets. The model produces high quality forecasts of pairwise correlations between commodities which can be used to construct a composite covariance matrix. We evaluate the quality of this matrix in a portfolio context and compare it to models used in the industry. We demonstrate significant economic gains in a realistic setting including short selling constraints and transaction costs. / Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
12

Macroeconomic variables and the stock market : an empirical comparison of the US and Japan

Humpe, Andreas January 2008 (has links)
In this thesis, extensive research regarding the relationship between macroeconomic variables and the stock market is carried out. For this purpose the two largest stock markets in the world, namely the US and Japan, are chosen. As a proxy for the US stock market we use the S&P500 and for Japan the Nikkei225. Although there are many empirical investigations of the US stock market, Japan has lagged behind. Especially the severe boom and bust sequence in Japan is unique in the developed world in recent economic history and it is important to shed more light on the causes of this development. First, we investigate the long-run relationship between selected macroeconomic variables and the stock market in a cointegration framework. As expected, we can support existing findings in the US, whereas Japan does not follow the same relationships as the US. Further econometric analysis reveals a structural break in Japan in the early 1990s. Before that break, the long-run relationship is comparable to the US, whereas after the break this relationship breaks down. We believe that a liquidity trap in a deflationary environment might have caused the normal relationship to break down. Secondly, we increase the variable set and apply a non-linear estimation technique to investigate non-linear behaviour between macroeconomic variables and the stock market. We find the non-linear models to have better in and out of sample performance than the appropriate linear models. Thirdly, we test a particular non-linear model of noise traders that interact with arbitrage traders in the dividend yield for the US and Japanese stock market. A two-regime switching model is supported with an inner random or momentum regime and an outer mean reversion regime. Overall, we recommend investors and policymakers to be aware that a liquidity trap in a deflationary environment could also cause severe downturn in the US if appropriate measures are not implemented accordingly.
13

Trois essais sur la liquidité : ses effets sur les primes de risque, les anticipations et l'asymétrie des risques financiers

Fontaine, Jean-Sébastien January 2009 (has links)
Thèse numérisée par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal.
14

Mesure et Prévision de la Volatilité pour les Actifs Liquides

Chaker, Selma 04 1900 (has links)
Le prix efficient est latent, il est contaminé par les frictions microstructurelles ou bruit. On explore la mesure et la prévision de la volatilité fondamentale en utilisant les données à haute fréquence. Dans le premier papier, en maintenant le cadre standard du modèle additif du bruit et le prix efficient, on montre qu’en utilisant le volume de transaction, les volumes d’achat et de vente, l’indicateur de la direction de transaction et la différence entre prix d’achat et prix de vente pour absorber le bruit, on améliore la précision des estimateurs de volatilité. Si le bruit n’est que partiellement absorbé, le bruit résiduel est plus proche d’un bruit blanc que le bruit original, ce qui diminue la misspécification des caractéristiques du bruit. Dans le deuxième papier, on part d’un fait empirique qu’on modélise par une forme linéaire de la variance du bruit microstructure en la volatilité fondamentale. Grâce à la représentation de la classe générale des modèles de volatilité stochastique, on explore la performance de prévision de différentes mesures de volatilité sous les hypothèses de notre modèle. Dans le troisième papier, on dérive de nouvelles mesures réalizées en utilisant les prix et les volumes d’achat et de vente. Comme alternative au modèle additif standard pour les prix contaminés avec le bruit microstructure, on fait des hypothèses sur la distribution du prix sans frictions qui est supposé borné par les prix de vente et d’achat. / The high frequency observed price series is contaminated with market microstructure frictions or noise. We explore the measurement and forecasting of the fundamental volatility through novel approaches to the frictions’ problem. In the first paper, while maintaining the standard framework of a noise-frictionless price additive model, we use the trading volume, quoted depths, trade direction indicator and bid-ask spread to get rid of the noise. The econometric model is a price impact linear regression. We show that incorporating the cited liquidity costs variables delivers more precise volatility estimators. If the noise is only partially absorbed, the remaining noise is closer to a white noise than the original one, which lessens misspecification of the noise characteristics. Our approach is also robust to a specific form of endogeneity under which the common robust to noise measures are inconsistent. In the second paper, we model the variance of the market microstructure noise that contaminates the frictionless price as an affine function of the fundamental volatility. Under our model, the noise is time-varying intradaily. Using the eigenfunction representation of the general stochastic volatility class of models, we quantify the forecasting performance of several volatility measures under our model assumptions. In the third paper, instead of assuming the standard additive model for the observed price series, we specify the conditional distribution of the frictionless price given the available information which includes quotes and volumes. We come up with new volatility measures by characterizing the conditional mean of the integrated variance.
15

Five contributions to econometric theory and the econometrics of ultra-high-frequency data

Meitz, Mika January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
16

Essays on autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity

Silvennoinen, Annastiina January 2006 (has links)
Diss. Stockholm : Handelshögskolan, 2006 S. 1-9: introduction, s. 11-170: 5 research papers
17

The european union emission trading scheme and energy markets : economic and financial analysis

Bertrand, Vincent 05 July 2012 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis investigates relationships between the European Union Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS) and energy markets. A special focus is given to fuel switching, the main shortterm abatement measure within the EU ETS. This consists in substituting Combined Cycle Gas Turbines (CCGTs) for hard-coal plants in off-peak power generation. Thereby coal plants run for shorter periods, which allows power producers to reduce their CO2 emissions. In Chapter 1, we outline different approaches explaining relationships between carbon and energy markets. We also review the literature relating to these issues. Next, we further describe the fuel switching process and, in particular, we analyze the influence of energy and environmental efficiency of thermal power plants (coal and gas) on fuel switching. In Chapter 2, we provide a theoretical analysis that shows how differences in the efficiency of CCGTs can rule interactions between gas and carbon prices. The main result shows that the allowance price becomes more sensitive to the gas price when the level of CO2 emissions increases. In Chapter 3, we examine interactions between carbon, coal, gas and electricity prices in an empirical study. Among the main results, we find that there is a significant link between carbon and gas prices in the long-run equilibrium.In Chapter 4, we analyze the cross-market price discovery process between gas and CO2 markets. We identified in previous chapters that there is a robust significant link between gas and CO2 markets. They are linked commodities, and their prices are affected by the same information. In an empirical analysis, we find that the carbon market is the leader in cross-market price discovery process.
18

Trois essais sur la liquidité : ses effets sur les primes de risque, les anticipations et l'asymétrie des risques financiers

Fontaine, Jean-Sébastien January 2009 (has links)
Thèse numérisée par la Division de la gestion de documents et des archives de l'Université de Montréal
19

Mesure et Prévision de la Volatilité pour les Actifs Liquides

Chaker, Selma 04 1900 (has links)
Le prix efficient est latent, il est contaminé par les frictions microstructurelles ou bruit. On explore la mesure et la prévision de la volatilité fondamentale en utilisant les données à haute fréquence. Dans le premier papier, en maintenant le cadre standard du modèle additif du bruit et le prix efficient, on montre qu’en utilisant le volume de transaction, les volumes d’achat et de vente, l’indicateur de la direction de transaction et la différence entre prix d’achat et prix de vente pour absorber le bruit, on améliore la précision des estimateurs de volatilité. Si le bruit n’est que partiellement absorbé, le bruit résiduel est plus proche d’un bruit blanc que le bruit original, ce qui diminue la misspécification des caractéristiques du bruit. Dans le deuxième papier, on part d’un fait empirique qu’on modélise par une forme linéaire de la variance du bruit microstructure en la volatilité fondamentale. Grâce à la représentation de la classe générale des modèles de volatilité stochastique, on explore la performance de prévision de différentes mesures de volatilité sous les hypothèses de notre modèle. Dans le troisième papier, on dérive de nouvelles mesures réalizées en utilisant les prix et les volumes d’achat et de vente. Comme alternative au modèle additif standard pour les prix contaminés avec le bruit microstructure, on fait des hypothèses sur la distribution du prix sans frictions qui est supposé borné par les prix de vente et d’achat. / The high frequency observed price series is contaminated with market microstructure frictions or noise. We explore the measurement and forecasting of the fundamental volatility through novel approaches to the frictions’ problem. In the first paper, while maintaining the standard framework of a noise-frictionless price additive model, we use the trading volume, quoted depths, trade direction indicator and bid-ask spread to get rid of the noise. The econometric model is a price impact linear regression. We show that incorporating the cited liquidity costs variables delivers more precise volatility estimators. If the noise is only partially absorbed, the remaining noise is closer to a white noise than the original one, which lessens misspecification of the noise characteristics. Our approach is also robust to a specific form of endogeneity under which the common robust to noise measures are inconsistent. In the second paper, we model the variance of the market microstructure noise that contaminates the frictionless price as an affine function of the fundamental volatility. Under our model, the noise is time-varying intradaily. Using the eigenfunction representation of the general stochastic volatility class of models, we quantify the forecasting performance of several volatility measures under our model assumptions. In the third paper, instead of assuming the standard additive model for the observed price series, we specify the conditional distribution of the frictionless price given the available information which includes quotes and volumes. We come up with new volatility measures by characterizing the conditional mean of the integrated variance.
20

Four Essays on Building Conditional Correlation GARCH Models.

Nakatani, Tomoaki January 2010 (has links)
This thesis consists of four research papers. The main focus is on building the multivariate Conditional Correlation (CC-) GARCH models. In particular, emphasis lies on considering an extension of CC-GARCH models that allow for interactions or causality in conditional variances. In the first three chapters, misspecification testing and parameter restrictions in these models are discussed. In the final chapter, a computer package for building major variants of the CC-GARCH models is presented. The first chapter contains a brief introduction to the CC-GARCH models as well as a summary of each research paper. The second chapter proposes a misspecification test for modelling of the conditional variance part of the Extended Constant CC-GARCH model. The test is designed for testing the hypothesis of no interactions in the conditional variances. If the null hypothesis is true, then the conditional variances may be described by the standard CCC-GARCH model. The test is constructed on the Lagrange Multiplier (LM) principle that only requires the estimation of the null model. Although the test is derived under the assumption of the constant conditional correlation, the simulation experiments suggest that the test is also applicable to building CC-GARCH models with changing conditional correlations. There is no asymptotic theory available for these models, which is why simulation of the test statistic in this situation has been necessary. The third chapter provides yet another misspecification test for modelling of the conditional variance component of the CC-GARCH models, whose parameters are often estimated in two steps. The estimator obtained through these two steps is a two-stage quasi-maximum likelihood estimator (2SQMLE). Taking advantage of the asymptotic results for 2SQMLE, the test considered in this chapter is formulated using the LM principle, which requires only the estimation of univariate GARCH models. It is also shown that the test statistic may be computed by using an auxiliary regression. A robust version of the new test is available through another auxiliary regression. All of this amounts to a substantial simplification in computations compared with the test proposed in the second chapter. The simulation experiments show that, under both under both Gaussian and leptokurtic innovations, as well as under changing conditional correlations, the new test has reasonable size and power properties. When modelling the conditional variance, it is necessary to keep the sequence of conditional covariance matrices positive definite almost surely for any time horizon. In the fourth chapter it is demonstrated that under certain conditions some of the parameters of the model can take negative values while the conditional covariance matrix remains positive definite almost surely. It is also shown that even in the simplest first-order vector GARCH representation, the relevant parameter space can contain negative values for some parameters, which is not possible in the univariate model. This finding makes it possible to incorporate negative volatility spillovers into the CC-GARCH framework. Many new GARCH models and misspecification testing procedures have been recently proposed in the literature. When it comes to applying these models or tests, however, there do not seem to exist many options for the users to choose from other than creating their own computer programmes. This is especially the case when one wants to apply a multivariate GARCH model. The last chapter of the thesis offers a remedy to this situation by providing a workable environment for building CC-GARCH models. The package is open source, freely available on the Internet, and designed for use in the open source statistical environment R. With this package can estimate major variants of CC-GARCH models as well as simulate data from the CC-GARCH data generating processes with multivariate normal or Student's t innovations. In addition, the package is equipped with the necessary functions for conducting diagnostic tests such as those discussed in the third chapter of this thesis. / <p>Diss. Stockholm : Handelshögskolan, 2010. Sammanfattning jämte 4 uppsatser.</p>

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