Search results for " risk premium"

showing 10 items of 28 documents

Dynamic Volatility Weighting in the Presence of Transaction Costs

2015

Numerous empirical studies demonstrate the superiority of dynamic strategies with volatility weighting over time mechanism. These strategies control the portfolio risk over time by adjusting the risk exposure according to updated volatility forecasts. Yet, in order to reap all benefits promised by volatility weighting over time, the composition of the active portfolio must be revised rather frequently. Transaction costs represent a serious obstacle to benefiting from this dynamic risk control technique. In this paper we propose a modified volatility weighting strategy that allows one to reduce dramatically the amount of trading costs. The empirical evidence shows that the advantages of the …

Actuarial scienceStochastic volatilityVolatility swapEconomicsEconometricsVolatility smilePortfolioImplied volatilityVolatility (finance)Volatility risk premiumWeightingSSRN Electronic Journal
researchProduct

Analysis of risk premium in UK natural gas futures

2018

Abstract In many futures markets, trading is concentrated on the front contract and positions are rolled-over until the strategy horizon is attained. In this paper, a pair-wise comparison between the conventional risk premium and the accrued risk premium in rolled-over positions on the front contract is carried out for UK natural gas futures. Several novel results are obtained. Firstly, and most importantly, the accrued risk premium in rollover strategies is significatively larger than conventional risk premiums and increases with the time to delivery. Specifically, for strategy horizons between three and six months, this difference increases from 1% to 10% (or from 4% to 20% in annualized …

Economics and EconometricsSpot contractFinancial economics020209 energyRisk premiumEquity premium puzzle02 engineering and technologyVolatility risk premiumLiquidity premiumDemand shock0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringEconometricsBusinessVolatility (finance)Futures contractFinanceInternational Review of Economics & Finance
researchProduct

Volatility co-movements: a time-scale decomposition analysis

2015

In this paper, we are interested in detecting contagion from US to European stock market volatilities in the period immediately after the Lehman Brothers collapse. The analysis is based on a factor decomposition of the covariance matrix, in the time and frequency domain, using wavelets. The analysis aims to disentangle two components of volatility contagion (anticipated and unanticipated by the market). Once we focus on standardized factor loadings, the results show no evidence of contagion (from the US) in market expectations (coming from implied volatility) and evidence of unanticipated contagion (coming from the volatility risk premium) for almost any European country. Finally, the estim…

Economics and EconometricsVariance swapStochastic volatilityFinancial economicsSettore SECS-P/05 - Econometriaheteroskedasticity biasImplied volatilityVolatility risk premiumwaveletsrealized volatilityvolatility risk premiumcontagionVolatility swapImplied volatility Realized volatility Volatility risk premium Contagion Heteroskedasticity bias WaveletsVolatility smileForward volatilityEconometricsEconomicsimplied volatility; realized volatility; volatility risk premium; contagion; heteroskedasticity bias; wavelets.Volatility (finance)Financeimplied volatility
researchProduct

Impacts of sovereign risk premium on bank profitability: Evidence from euro area

2021

We analyse the effects of low and negative interest rates and sovereign risk premium on bank profitability among 154 Eurozone banks during the period 2005–2019. In contrast to some of the results in the previous literature, we find that the euro area banks have not suffered too much from the extremely low and negative interest rate era regarding their net interest margins. However, the overall profitability has lowered clearly during the sample period, and the sovereign risk premium has a robust negative effect on all the overall profitability measures, both with risk-adjustment and without it, but it seems to have an increasing effect on the degree of wholesale funding and loan loss provis…

Economics and Econometricseuroaluepankitmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policySample (statistics)Monetary economicskannattavuuskorkopolitiikkaUnconventional monetary policyBanking sectorInterest ratekorkoNegative interest ratesLoanWholesale fundingEconomicsSovereign risk premiumProfitability indexBank profitabilityFinancemedia_commonCredit riskInternational Review of Financial Analysis
researchProduct

Trading with Asymmetric Volatility Spillovers

2007

:  We study the profitability of trading strategies based on volatility spillovers between large and small firms. By using the Volatility Impulse-Response Function of Lin (1997) and its extensions, we detect that any volatility shock coming from small companies is important to large companies, but the reverse is only true for negative shocks coming from large firms. To exploit these asymmetric patterns in volatility, different trading rules are designed based on the inverse relationship existing between expected return and volatility. We find that most strategies generate excess after-transaction cost profits, especially after very bad news and very good news coming from large or small firm…

ExploitFinancial economicsMonetary economicsImplied volatilityVolatility risk premiumShock (economics)Trading rulesVolatility swapAccountingVolatility smileEconomicsEconometricsBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)Expected returnTrading strategyProfitability indexProject portfolio managementVolatility (finance)FinanceJournal of Business Finance & Accounting
researchProduct

Volatility risk premia and financial connectedness

2014

In this paper we use the Diebold Yilmaz (2009 and 2012) methodology to construct an index of connectedness among five European stock markets: France, Germany, UK, Switzerland and the Netherlands, by using volatility risk premia. The volatility risk premium, which is a proxy of risk aversion, is measured by the difference between the implied volatility and expected realized volatility of the stock market for next month. While Diebold and Yilmaz focus is on the forecast error variance decomposition of stock returns or range based volatilities employing a stationary VAR in levels, we account for the (locally) long memory stationary properties of the levels of volatility risk premia series. The…

FIVARvolatility risk premium long memory FIVAR financial connectednessvolatility risk premiumfinancial connectednessSettore SECS-P/05 - Econometrialong memory
researchProduct

Financial connectedness among European volatility risk premia

2015

In this paper we use the Diebold Yilmaz (2009 and 2012) methodology to estimate the contribution and the vulnerability to systemic risk of volatility risk premia for five European stock markets: France, Germany, UK, Switzerland and the Netherlands. The volatility risk premium, which is a proxy of risk aversion, is measured by the difference between the implied volatility and expected realized volatility of the stock market for next month. While Diebold and Yilmaz focus is on the forecast error variance decomposition of stock returns or range based volatilities employing a stationary VAR in levels, we account for the (locally) long memory stationary properties of the levels of volatility ris…

FIVARvolatility risk premium long memory FIVAR financial connectednessvolatility risk premiumfinancial connectednesslong memorySettore SECS-P/05 - Econometria
researchProduct

An index of financial connectedness applied to variance risk premia

2014

The purpose is to construct an index of financial connectedness among France, Germany, UK, Switzerland and the Netherlands variance risk premia. The variance risk premium of each country stock market is measured by the difference between the (square) of implied volatility and expected realized variance of the stock market for next month. The total and directional indices of financial connectedness are obtained from the forecast error variance decomposition of a Vector Autoregressive Model, VAR, as recently suggested by Diebold and Yilmaz. While the authors main focus is on connectedness among financial returns, they base their analysis on a short memory stationary VAR. Given the long memory…

FIVARvolatility risk premiumfinancial connectednesslong memorySettore SECS-P/05 - Econometria
researchProduct

Futures pricing in electricity markets based on stable CARMA spot models

2012

We present a new model for the electricity spot price dynamics, which is able to capture seasonality, low-frequency dynamics and the extreme spikes in the market. Instead of the usual purely deterministic trend we introduce a non-stationary independent increments process for the low-frequency dynamics, and model the large uctuations by a non-Gaussian stable CARMA process. The model allows for analytic futures prices, and we apply these to model and estimate the whole market consistently. Besides standard parameter estimation, an estimation procedure is suggested, where we t the non-stationary trend using futures data with long time until delivery, and a robust L 1 -lter to nd the states of …

FOS: Computer and information sciencesEconomics and EconometricsElectricity spot pricebusiness.industryEstimation theoryRisk premium60G52 62M10 91B84 (Primary) 60G10 60G51 91B70 (Secondary)Lévy processStatistics - ApplicationsCARMA model electricity spot prices electricity forward prices continuous time linear model Lévy process stable CARMA process risk premium robust filterddc:MicroeconomicsFOS: Economics and businessGeneral EnergyBase load power plantPeak loadEconometricsEconomicsApplications (stat.AP)ElectricityPricing of Securities (q-fin.PR)businessFutures contractQuantitative Finance - Pricing of Securities
researchProduct

Stock Return Volatility on Scandinavian Stock Markets and the Banking Industry: Evidence from the Years of Financial Liberalisation and Banking Crisis

1999

This paper investigates the evolution of the (conditional) volatility of returns on three Scandinavian markets (Finland, Norway and Sweden) over the turbulent period of the past decade, namely the overlapping periods of financial liberalisation, drastically changing macroeconomic conditions and banking crisis. We find that even over this relatively turbulent period volatility is in most cases successfully captured by past volatility and shocks to past volatility, ie by a (symmetric) GARCH process. In each country banking crisis has induced regime shifts in (unconditional) volatility. We also find evidence for cross-country volatility spillovers during the banking crisis episodes. The estima…

FinanceLiberalizationbusiness.industryVolatility swapAutoregressive conditional heteroskedasticityVolatility smileVolatility (finance)Implied volatilitybusinessVolatility risk premiumStock (geology)SSRN Electronic Journal
researchProduct