20 resultados para Stock return predictability
em Université de Montréal, Canada
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In this paper, we characterize the asymmetries of the smile through multiple leverage effects in a stochastic dynamic asset pricing framework. The dependence between price movements and future volatility is introduced through a set of latent state variables. These latent variables can capture not only the volatility risk and the interest rate risk which potentially affect option prices, but also any kind of correlation risk and jump risk. The standard financial leverage effect is produced by a cross-correlation effect between the state variables which enter into the stochastic volatility process of the stock price and the stock price process itself. However, we provide a more general framework where asymmetric implied volatility curves result from any source of instantaneous correlation between the state variables and either the return on the stock or the stochastic discount factor. In order to draw the shapes of the implied volatility curves generated by a model with latent variables, we specify an equilibrium-based stochastic discount factor with time non-separable preferences. When we calibrate this model to empirically reasonable values of the parameters, we are able to reproduce the various types of implied volatility curves inferred from option market data.
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Analyses of trade quotas typically assume that the quota restricts the flow of some nondurable good. Many real-world quotas, however, restrict the stock of durable imports. We consider the cases where (1) anyone is free to export against such quotas and where (2) only those allocated portions of the total quota are free to export against such quotas. Recent econometric investigations of such quotas have focused on the price of the durable as an indicator of tightness induced by the quota. We show why this is an inappropriate indicator and suggest alternatives.
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This paper extends the Competitive Storage Model by incorporating prominent features of the production process and financial markets. A major limitation of this basic model is that it cannot successfully explain the degree of serial correlation observed in actual data. The proposed extensions build on the observation that in order to generate a high degree of price persistence, a model must incorporate features such that agents are willing to hold stocks more often than predicted by the basic model. We therefore allow unique characteristics of the production and trading mechanisms to provide the required incentives. Specifically, the proposed models introduce (i) gestation lags in production with heteroskedastic supply shocks, (ii) multiperiod forward contracts, and (iii) a convenience return to inventory holding. The rational expectations solutions for twelve commodities are numerically solved. Simulations are then employed to assess the effects of the above extensions on the time series properties of commodity prices. Results indicate that each of the features above partially account for the persistence and occasional spikes observed in actual data. Evidence is presented that the precautionary demand for stocks might play a substantial role in the dynamics of commodity prices.
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In this paper, we test a version of the conditional CAPM with respect to a local market portfolio, proxied by the Brazilian stock index during the 1976-1992 period. We also test a conditional APT model by using the difference between the 30-day rate (Cdb) and the overnight rate as a second factor in addition to the market portfolio in order to capture the large inflation risk present during this period. The conditional CAPM and APT models are estimated by the Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) and tested on a set of size portfolios created from a total of 25 securities exchanged on the Brazilian markets. The inclusion of this second factor proves to be crucial for the appropriate pricing of the portfolios.
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We provide a theoretical framework to explain the empirical finding that the estimated betas are sensitive to the sampling interval even when using continuously compounded returns. We suppose that stock prices have both permanent and transitory components. The permanent component is a standard geometric Brownian motion while the transitory component is a stationary Ornstein-Uhlenbeck process. The discrete time representation of the beta depends on the sampling interval and two components labelled \"permanent and transitory betas\". We show that if no transitory component is present in stock prices, then no sampling interval effect occurs. However, the presence of a transitory component implies that the beta is an increasing (decreasing) function of the sampling interval for more (less) risky assets. In our framework, assets are labelled risky if their \"permanent beta\" is greater than their \"transitory beta\" and vice versa for less risky assets. Simulations show that our theoretical results provide good approximations for the means and standard deviations of estimated betas in small samples. Our results can be perceived as indirect evidence for the presence of a transitory component in stock prices, as proposed by Fama and French (1988) and Poterba and Summers (1988).
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Recent work shows that a low correlation between the instruments and the included variables leads to serious inference problems. We extend the local-to-zero analysis of models with weak instruments to models with estimated instruments and regressors and with higher-order dependence between instruments and disturbances. This makes this framework applicable to linear models with expectation variables that are estimated non-parametrically. Two examples of such models are the risk-return trade-off in finance and the impact of inflation uncertainty on real economic activity. Results show that inference based on Lagrange Multiplier (LM) tests is more robust to weak instruments than Wald-based inference. Using LM confidence intervals leads us to conclude that no statistically significant risk premium is present in returns on the S&P 500 index, excess holding yields between 6-month and 3-month Treasury bills, or in yen-dollar spot returns.
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In this paper, we test a version of the conditional CAPM with respect to a local market portfolio, proxied by the Brazilian stock index during the 1976-1992 period. We also test a conditional APT model by using the difference between the 30-day rate (Cdb) and the overnight rate as a second factor in addition to the market portfolio in order to capture the large inflation risk present during this period. the conditional CAPM and APT models are estimated by the Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) and tested on a set of size portfolios created from a total of 25 securities exchanged on the Brazilian markets. the inclusion of this second factor proves to be crucial for the appropriate pricing of the portfolios.
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This note develops general model-free adjustment procedures for the calculation of unbiased volatility loss functions based on practically feasible realized volatility benchmarks. The procedures, which exploit the recent asymptotic distributional results in Barndorff-Nielsen and Shephard (2002a), are both easy to implement and highly accurate in empirically realistic situations. On properly accounting for the measurement errors in the volatility forecast evaluations reported in Andersen, Bollerslev, Diebold and Labys (2003), the adjustments result in markedly higher estimates for the true degree of return-volatility predictability.
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Rapport de recherche
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La présente recherche a pour but de faire le point sur l'état du droit canadien et sur ses perspectives futures en relation avec les œuvres créées par ordinateurs. L'outil terminologique choisi pour notre objectif est le logiciel de traduction automatique multilingue qui, à cause de sa complexité, s'éloigne le plus du programmeur « créateur» et se rapproche le plus d'œuvres qui ne peuvent être directement attribuées aux linguistes et programmeurs. Ces outils et leurs créations seront d'après nous les prochains outils technologiques à confronter le droit. En effet, dans un avenir prévisible, considérant l'évolution technologique, ces logiciels produiront des textes qui bénéficieront d'une valeur commerciale ajoutée et c'est alors que certains feront valoir leurs « droits », non seulement sur les textes mais aussi sur la technologie. Pour atteindre cet objectif, nous débuterons par un retour historique sur la technologie et ses origines. Par la suite, nous ferons une analyse de la protection actuelle accordée aux logiciels, aux banques de données et aux traductions qu'ils produisent. Nous déterminerons ensuite qui sera responsable des textes produits en relation avec le texte d'origine et avec sa résultante au niveau du droit d'auteur et de celui de la responsabilité civile. Cette recherche nous amènera à conclure que le droit actuel est « mésadapté » tant à l'égard de la protection qu'au niveau de la responsabilité. Ces conclusions devront d'après nous imposer un retour aux principes fondamentaux du droit. Ce fondamentalisme légal sera pour nous le prix à payer pour la légitimité. En effet, plus particulièrement concernant le droit d'auteur, nous conclurons qu'il devra cesser d'être le « fourre-tout» du droit de la propriété intellectuelle et redevenir ce qu'il doit être: un droit qui protège la créativité. Cette démarche prospective tirera ses racines du fait que nous serons obligés de conclure que les juristes canadiens ont refusé, à tort à notre point de vue, de renvoyer au monde des brevets les méthodes et procédés nouveaux et inventifs, ce qui donc a introduit des problématiques inutiles qui exacerbent l'incertitude. Finalement, notre cheminement nous dirigera vers le droit de la responsabilité où nous soutiendrons que le fournisseur ne peut actuellement être responsable du texte produit puisqu'il ne participe pas directement aux choix et ne porte pas atteinte au contenu. Voici donc en quelques mots le cœur de notre recherche qui entrouvre une boîte de Pandore.