Search results for "DAS"

showing 10 items of 4164 documents

TESTING FOR CONTAGION: A CONDITIONAL CORRELATION ANALYSIS

2005

Abstract In this paper, we test for contagion within the East Asian region, contagion being defined as a significant increase in the degree of comovement between stock returns in different countries. For this purpose, we use a parameter stability test, and, following [Rigobon, R., 2003a. On the measurement of the international propagation of shocks: is the transmission stable?, Journal of International Economics], we control for three types of bias, resulting from heteroscedasticity, endogeneity and omitted variable, respectively. The null of interdependence against the alternative of contagion is then tested as an overidentifying restriction. Unlike other studies, our approach is based on …

Economics and EconometricsHeteroscedasticityContagionStability testFinancial economicsConditional correlationAsset marketOmitted-variable biascontagion; identification; heteroscedasticityheteroscedasticityEast asian regioncontagionCorrelation analysisEconometricsEconomicsjel:F3Contagion Financial Crises Conditional Correlationidentificationjel:F4EndogeneityFinancial criseFinanceStock (geology)
researchProduct

A critical view on temperature modelling for application in weather derivatives markets

2012

In this paper we present a stochastic model for daily average temperature. The model contains seasonality, a low-order autoregressive component and a variance describing the heteroskedastic residuals. The model is estimated on daily average temperature records from Stockholm (Sweden). By comparing the proposed model with the popular model of Campbell and Diebold (2005), we point out some important issues to be addressed when modelling the temperature for application in weather derivatives market.

Economics and EconometricsHeteroscedasticityStochastic modellingAutoregressive conditional heteroskedasticityVariance (accounting)Seasonalitymedicine.diseaseGeneral EnergyAutoregressive modelDerivatives marketmedicineEconometricsTime seriesMathematicsEnergy Economics
researchProduct

Monetary policy and the exchange rate during the Asian crisis: identification through heteroscedasticity

2005

Abstract This paper examines whether a monetary policy tightening (i.e., an increase in the domestic interest rate) was successful in defending the exchange rate from speculative pressures during the Asian financial crisis. We estimate a bivariate VECM for four Asian countries, and improve upon existing studies in two important ways. First, by using a long data span we are able to compare the effects of an interest rate rise on the nominal exchange rate during tranquil and turbulent periods. Second, we take into account the endogeneity of interest rates and identify the system by exploiting the heteroscedasticity properties of the relevant time series, following Rigobon [Identification thro…

Economics and EconometricsHeteroscedasticitymedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policymonetary policyfinancial crisisidentificationBivariate analysisMonetary economicsjel:E52jel:C32Interest ratemonetary policy; exchange rates; identification; heteroscedasticityIdentification (information)Exchange rateFinancial crisisEconomicsEndogeneityFinancemedia_commonMonetary Policy; Financial Crisis; Identification
researchProduct

The Economic Value of Volatility Transmission Between the Stock and Bond Markets

2008

This study has two main objectives. Firstly, volatility transmission between stocks and bonds in European markets is studied using the two most important financial assets in these fields: the DJ Euro Stoxx 50 index futures contract and the Euro Bund futures contract. Secondly, a trading rule for the major European futures contracts is designed. This rule can be applied to different markets and assets to analyze the economic significance of volatility spillovers observed between them. The results indicate that volatility spillovers take place in both directions and that the stock-bond trading rule offers very profitable returns after transaction costs. These results have important implicatio…

Economics and EconometricsIndex (economics)Financial economicsAutoregressive conditional heteroskedasticityBondAsset allocationMonetary economicsImplied volatilityGeneral Business Management and AccountingEfficient-market hypothesisAccountingVolatility swapEconometricsEconomicsVolatility smileBond marketProject portfolio managementVolatility (finance)Futures contractFinanceStock (geology)SSRN Electronic Journal
researchProduct

Determinantes del comportamiento de queja y su importancia en la segmentación de clientes insatisfechos

2008

ResumenEsta investigación de carácter exploratorio aborda el proceso de formación del comportamiento de queja utilizando el proceso de segmentación de clientes. Consideramos que dicho comportamiento agrupa dos tipos de respuestas a la insatisfacción: las respuestas de queja y las respuestas privadas. Nuestro objetivo es conocer la capacidad que tiene la intensidad de la insatisfacción y otras variables relevantes de la literatura en la discriminación de segmentos de consumidores, con el propósito de estudiar sus comportamientos y características. La metodología de análisis CHAID ha permitido segmentar la muestra en diferentes grupos identificando los principales antecedentes de ambos tipos …

Economics and EconometricsInsatisfacciónmarket segmentation and CHAIDcomportamiento de quejaprivate responsesGeneral Business Management and AccountingDissatisfactioncomplaining behaviorrespuestas privadassegmentación del mercado y CHAID
researchProduct

A Test of Covariance-Matrix Forecasting Methods

2015

Providing a more accurate covariance matrix forecast can substantially improve the performance of optimized portfolios. Using out-of-sample tests, in this article the author evaluates alternative covariance matrix-forecasting methods by looking at: (1) their forecast accuracy, (2) their ability to track the volatility of a minimum-variance portfolio, and (3) their ability to keep the volatility of a minimum-variance portfolio at a target level. The author finds large differences between the methods. The results suggest that shrinking the sample covariance matrix improves neither the forecast accuracy nor the performance of minimum-variance portfolios. In contrast, switching from the sample …

Economics and EconometricsMultivariate statisticsCovariance matrixAutoregressive conditional heteroskedasticityContrast (statistics)CovarianceGeneral Business Management and AccountingTracking errorAccountingEconometricsStatistics::MethodologyPortfolioVolatility (finance)Physics::Atmospheric and Oceanic PhysicsFinanceMathematicsThe Journal of Portfolio Management
researchProduct

A Mixture Multiplicative Error Model for Realized Volatility

2006

A multiplicative error model with time-varying parameters and an error term following a mixture of gamma distributions is introduced. The model is fitted to the daily realized volatility series of deutschemark/dollar and yen/dollar returns and is shown to capture the conditional distribution of these variables better than the commonly used autoregressive fractionally integrated moving average model. The forecasting performance of the new model is found to be, in general, superior to that of the set of volatility models recently considered by Andersen et al. (2003, Econometrica 71, 579--625) for the same data. Copyright 2006, Oxford University Press.

Economics and EconometricsRealized varianceAutoregressive conditional heteroskedasticityStatisticsGamma distributionForward volatilityEconometricsEconomicsConditional probability distributionVolatility (finance)Mixture modelFinanceAutoregressive fractionally integrated moving averageJournal of Financial Econometrics
researchProduct

El desarrollo de las ONG de México y su coincidencia con los Objetivos para el Desarrollo Sostenible de Naciones Unidas

2018

Después de décadas de discusiones y acuerdos internacionales, en 2015 la Organización de las Naciones Unidas adoptó la “Agenda 2030 para el Desarrollo Sostenible” con la finalidad de contribuir a la solución de los actuales problemas de la humanidad. Frente a la complejidad de los mismos, su cumplimiento no puede quedar exclusivamente en manos de los gobiernos, de ahí la importancia del papel a cumplir por parte de
 la sociedad civil. En ese contexto, el objetivo del presente trabajo es presentar un panorama general del desarrollo de las Organizaciones no Gubernamentales (ONG) en el país que permita analizar su coincidencia con los objetivos de la mencionada Agenda, por medio de anális…

Economics and EconometricsSociology and Political ScienceMéxicoEconomía y FinanzasOrganizaciones No GubernamentalesNaciones UnidasUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICASOrganizaciones de la Sociedad Civilevaluación:CIENCIAS ECONÓMICAS [UNESCO]Objetivos para el Desarrollo Sostenible
researchProduct

Nonlinear GARCH models for highly persistent volatility

2005

In this paper we study new nonlinear GARCH models mainly designed for time series with highly persistent volatility. For such series, conventional GARCH models have often proved unsatisfactory because they tend to exaggerate volatility persistence and exhibit poor forecasting ability. Our main emphasis is on models that are similar to previously introduced smooth transition GARCH models except for the novel feature that a lagged value of conditional variance is used as the transition variable. This choice of the transition variable corresponds to the idea that high persistence in conditional variance is related to relatively infrequent changes in regime. U sing the theory of Markov chains w…

Economics and EconometricsStatistics::TheorySeries (mathematics)Markov chainAutoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity05 social sciences01 natural sciencesVolatility persistenceVariable (computer science)010104 statistics & probabilityNonlinear systemExchange rate0502 economics and businessEconometrics0101 mathematicsVolatility (finance)Conditional variance050205 econometrics Mathematics
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