Equity trading volume and volatility: Latent information arrivals and common long-run dependencies


Autoria(s): Bollerslev, T; Jubinski, D
Data(s)

01/01/1999

Formato

9 - 21

application/pdf

Identificador

Journal of Business and Economic Statistics, 1999, 17 (1), pp. 9 - 21

0735-0015

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/1879

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/1879

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

Journal of Business and Economic Statistics

10.2307/1392235

Palavras-Chave #fractional integration #mixture of distributions hypothesis #return volatility #spectral analysis #trading volume
Tipo

Journal Article

Resumo

This article examines the behavior of equity trading volume and volatility for the individual firms composing the Standard & Poor's 100 composite index. Using multivariate spectral methods, we find that fractionally integrated processes best describe the long-run temporal dependencies in both series. Consistent with a stylized mixture-of-distributions hypothesis model in which the aggregate "news"-arrival process possesses long-memory characteristics, the long-run hyperbolic decay rates appear to be common across each volume-volatility pair.