Department of Economics and Business Economics

Leopoldo Catania

Density Forecasts and the Leverage Effect: Evidence from Observation and Parameter–Driven Volatility Models

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperConference articleResearchpeer-review

The leverage effect refers to the well-known relationship between returns and volatility for an equity. When returns fall, volatility increases. We evaluate the role of the leverage effect with regards to generating density forecasts of equity returns using well-known observation and parameter-driven conditional volatility models. These models differ in their assumptions regarding: The parametric specification, the evolution of the conditional volatility process and how the leverage effect is specified. The ability of a model to generate accurate density forecasts when the leverage effect is incorporated or not as well as a comparison between different model-types is analyzed using a large number of financial time series. For each model type, the specification with the leverage effect tends to generate more accurate density forecasts than its no-leverage counterpart. Among the specifications considered, the Beta-t-EGARCH model is the top performer, regardless of whether we attach the same weight to each region of the conditional distribution or emphasize the left tail.

Original languageEnglish
JournalThe European Journal of Finance
Volume26
Issue2-3
Pages (from-to)100-118
Number of pages19
ISSN1351-847X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11 Feb 2020
EventInternational Conference on Mathematical and Statistical Methods for Actuarial Sciences and Finance - University Carlos III de Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Duration: 4 Apr 20186 Apr 2018
Conference number: 8

Conference

ConferenceInternational Conference on Mathematical and Statistical Methods for Actuarial Sciences and Finance
Number8
LocationUniversity Carlos III de Madrid
CountrySpain
CityMadrid
Period04/04/201806/04/2018

    Research areas

  • Conditional volatility, density forecasts, leverage effect, wCRPS

See relations at Aarhus University Citationformats

ID: 144658729