Search results for "Price"

showing 10 items of 428 documents

The welfare cost of unpriced heterogeneity in insurance markets

2016

We consider the welfare loss of unpriced heterogeneity in insurance markets, which results when private information or regulatory constraints prevent insurance companies to set premiums reflecting expected costs. We propose a methodology which uses survey data to measure this welfare loss. After identifying some “types” which determine expected risk and insurance demand, we derive the key factors defining the demand and cost functions in each market induced by these unobservable types. These are used to quantify the efficiency costs of unpriced heterogeneity. We apply our methods to the US Long-Term Care and Medigap insurance markets, where we find that unpriced heterogeneity causes substan…

Economics and EconometricsActuarial sciencemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesMedigap InsuranceGeneral insurance01 natural sciencesUnobservableMicroeconomics010104 statistics & probabilitySettore SECS-P/03 - Scienza Delle Finanze0502 economics and businessunpriced heterogeneityEconomicsDeadweight lossSurvey data collection050207 economics0101 mathematicsInefficiencyWelfarePrivate information retrievalinsurance marketsmedia_common
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The timeline of trading frictions in the European carbon market

2012

We evaluate the quality of prices of EU-ETS, the most active European derivative market for greenhouse gas emissions allowances (EUAs). So far, this market has had two phases, a trial phase (from 2005 to 2007) and a commitment phase (from 2008 to 2012). The true value of a trial-phase EUA at the beginning of 2008 was inevitably zero because it could not be used in the commitment phase to cover emission targets. However, continued rumors of over-allocation of EUAs led to an early collapse of the market by May 2007. We study whether this market breakdown and the subsequent outbreak of the international financial crisis had a persistent effect on the quality of the commitment phase. We provide…

Economics and EconometricsAdverse selectionTimelineMarket microstructureMonetary economicsEuropean Union Emission Trading SchemeTrial Phasecomputer.software_genreMarket makerMarket liquidityMicroeconomicsGeneral EnergyGreenhouse gasFinancial crisisDerivatives marketEconomicsPrice returnEmissions tradingVolatility (finance)Algorithmic tradingcomputerEnergy Economics
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Are there threshold effects in the stock price–dividend relation? The case of the US stock market, 1871–2004

2008

We use recent developments on threshold autoregressive models that allow deriving endogenously threshold effects to analyse the evolution of the US stock price–dividend relation over the period 1871 to 2004. More specifically, a mean-reverting dynamic behaviour of the stock price–dividend ratio should be expected once such threshold is reached. Our empirical results showed that significant adjustments would occur when, in a particular year, the stock price–dividend ratio had shown a decrease of more than 8.0% between the previous year and the fourth year before, which implies nonlinearities in the dynamic behaviour of the US stock price–dividend relation.

Economics and EconometricsAutoregressive modelFinancial economicsEconomicsEconometricsDividendStock marketFinanceStock priceStock (geology)Applied Financial Economics
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Booms and busts in housing markets: determinants and implications

2009

This study looks at real estate price booms and busts in industrialised countries. It identifies major and persistent deviations from long term trends for 18 countries and estimates the probabilities of their occurrence using a Random Effects Panel Probit model over the period 1980-2007. It finds that 1) most recent housing booms have been very persistent and of a significant magnitude; 2) there appears to be a strong correlation between the persistence and magnitude of booms and subsequent busts; 3) economic costs (in terms of GDP losses during the post-boom phase) depend significantly on the magnitude and duration of the boom and money and credit developments during that period; 4) a numb…

Economics and EconometricsBooms and busts house prices housing marketmedia_common.quotation_subjectglobal liquidityFinancial marketSettore SECS-P/02 Politica EconomicaFinancial deregulationMonetary economicsmonetary policiecredit growthHousing priceBoombooms and bustInterest rateMarket liquidityfinancial deregulationDeregulationEconomicsMultinomial probitmedia_commonFinancial sector
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Pricing of forwards and other derivatives in cointegrated commodity markets

2015

Abstract We analyze cointegration in commodity markets, and propose a parametric class of pricing measures which preserves cointegration for forward prices with fixed time to maturity. We present explicit expressions for the term structure of volatility and correlation in the context of our spot price models based on continuous-time autoregressive moving average dynamics for the stationary components. The term structures have many interesting shapes, and we provide some empirical evidence from refined oil future prices at NYMEX defending our modeling idea. Motivated from these results, we present a cointegrated forward price dynamics using the Heath–Jarrow–Morton approach. In this setting, …

Economics and EconometricsComplete marketSpot contractCointegrationFinancial economicsRisk premiumContext (language use)Margrabe's formulaGeneral EnergyEconomicsEconometricsForward priceVolatility (finance)Spread option
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Model Based Monte Carlo Pricing of Energy and Temperature Quanto Options

2010

Weather derivatives have become very popular tools in weather risk management in recent years. One of the elements supporting their diffusion has been the increase in volatility observed on many energy markets. Among the several available contracts, Quanto options are now becoming very popular for a simple reason: they take into account the strong correlation between energy consumption and certain weather conditions, so enabling price and weather risk to be controlled at the same time. These products are more efficient and, in many cases, significantly cheaper than simpler plain vanilla options. Unfortunately, the specific features of energy and weather time series do not enable the use of …

Economics and EconometricsComputer scienceMonte Carlo methodTemperature levelBivariate analysisEnergy priceDynamic modelMicroeconomicsEconomicsEconometricsweather derivatives Quanto options pricing derivative pricing model simulation and forecast.Time seriesQuanto options; Temperature level; Energy price; Dynamic modelMonte Carlo methods for option pricingjel:C53Quanto optionsjel:C51Energy consumptionVariance (accounting)jel:C32Quantojel:G13weather derivatives; Quanto options pricing; derivative pricing; model simulation; forecastjel:L94jel:G17General Energyjel:Q54Binomial options pricing modelVolatility (finance)Futures contract
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Why is equity order flow so persistent?

2015

Abstract Order flow in equity markets is remarkably persistent in the sense that order signs (to buy or sell) are positively autocorrelated out to time lags of tens of thousands of orders, corresponding to many days. Two possible explanations are herding, corresponding to positive correlation in the behavior of different investors, or order splitting, corresponding to positive autocorrelation in the behavior of single investors. We investigate this using order flow data from the London Stock Exchange for which we have membership identifiers. By formulating models for herding and order splitting, as well as models for brokerage choice, we are able to overcome the distortion introduced by bro…

Economics and EconometricsControl and OptimizationMarket microstructureApplied MathematicsPrice impactAutocorrelationEquity (finance)Market microstructureHerdingBehavioral economicsPositive correlationOrder flowMicroeconomicsOrder splittingStock exchangeBehavioral financeEconomicsEconometricsHerding
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Oil price risk in the Spanish stock market: An industry perspective

2014

Abstract This study examines the sensitivity of the Spanish stock market at the industry level to movements in oil prices over the period 1993–2010, paying special attention to the presence of endogenously determined structural changes in the relationship between oil price changes and industry equity returns. The empirical results show that the degree of oil price exposure of Spanish industries is rather limited, although significant differences are found across industries. The oil price sensitivity is very weak in the 1990s, a period of fairly stable and low oil prices. Instead, the link between crude oil and stock prices seems to have increased during the 2000s, becoming primarily positiv…

Economics and EconometricsCost priceFinancial economicsEquity (finance)Mid priceEconomicsPrice levelStock marketOil-storage tradeOil pricehealth care economics and organizationsStock (geology)Economic Modelling
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Time-varying causality between crude oil and stock markets: What can we learn from a multiscale perspective?

2017

This paper investigates the presence of time-varying causal linkages in mean and variance between oil price changes and stock returns for six major oil-importing countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the UK and the US) in a multiscale framework that combines wavelet analysis and a modified version of the dynamic causality test of Lu, Hong, Wang, Lai, and Liu (2014). The results show significant bidirectional causal relations between oil and stock markets at the different time horizons for all countries. The causal links tend to be stronger at coarser scales and in periods of financial turmoil, mainly during the recent global financial and European sovereign debt crises. This evidence pr…

Economics and EconometricsFinancial economics020209 energyCausal relations02 engineering and technologyWavelet analysisCrude oilStock returnsGranger causality0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringEconomicsGranger causalityOil priceOil priceSovereign debtFinanceStock (geology)
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Integration and arbitrage in the Spanish financial markets: An empirical approach*

2000

Several authors have introduced different ways to measure integra-tion between financial markets. Most of them are derived from thebasic assumptions about asset prices, like the Law of One Price or ...

Economics and EconometricsFinancial economicsFinancial marketFundamental theorem of asset pricingGeneral Business Management and AccountingFixed income arbitrageAccountingLaw of one priceArbitrage pricing theoryEconomicsRisk arbitrageArbitrageFinanceIndex arbitrageJournal of Futures Markets
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