19 resultados para High-frequency transformers


Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This paper proposes a two-step procedure to back out the conditional alpha of a given stock using high-frequency data. We rst estimate the realized factor loadings of the stocks, and then retrieve their conditional alphas by estimating the conditional expectation of their risk-adjusted returns. We start with the underlying continuous-time stochastic process that governs the dynamics of every stock price and then derive the conditions under which we may consistently estimate the daily factor loadings and the resulting conditional alphas. We also contribute empiri-cally to the conditional CAPM literature by examining the main drivers of the conditional alphas of the S&P 100 index constituents from January 2001 to December 2008. In addition, to con rm whether these conditional alphas indeed relate to pricing errors, we assess the performance of both cross-sectional and time-series momentum strategies based on the conditional alpha estimates. The ndings are very promising in that these strategies not only seem to perform pretty well both in absolute and relative terms, but also exhibit virtually no systematic exposure to the usual risk factors (namely, market, size, value and momentum portfolios).

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Este trabalho apresenta um estudo do impacto das negociações algorítmicas no processo de descoberta de preços no mercado de câmbio. Foram utilizados dados de negociação de alta frequência para contratos futuros de reais por dólar (DOL), negociados na Bolsa de Valores de São Paulo no período de janeiro a junho de 2013. No intuito de verificar se as estratégias algorítmicas de negociação são mais dependentes do que as negociações não algorítmicas, foi examinada a frequência em que algoritmos negociam entre si e comparou-se a um modelo benchmark que produz probabilidades teóricas para diferentes tipos de negociadores. Os resultados obtidos para as negociações minuto a minuto apresentam evidências de que as ações e estratégias de negociadores algorítmicos parecem ser menos diversas e mais dependentes do que aquelas realizadas por negociadores não algorítmicos. E para modelar a interação entre a autocorrelação serial dos retornos e negociações algorítmicas, foi estimado um vetor autorregressivo de alta frequência (VAR) em sua forma reduzida. As estimações mostram que as atividades dos algoritmos de negociação causam um aumento na autocorrelação dos retornos, indicando que eles podem contribuir para o aumento da volatilidade.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The goal of this paper is twofold. First, using five of the most actively traded stocks in the Brazilian financial market, this paper shows that the normality assumption commonly used in the risk management area to describe the distributions of returns standardized by volatilities is not compatible with volatilities estimated by EWMA or GARCH models. In sharp contrast, when the information contained in high frequency data is used to construct the realized volatilies measures, we attain the normality of the standardized returns, giving promise of improvements in Value at Risk statistics. We also describe the distributions of volatilities of the Brazilian stocks, showing that the distributions of volatilities are nearly lognormal. Second, we estimate a simple linear model to the log of realized volatilities that differs from the ones in other studies. The main difference is that we do not find evidence of long memory. The estimated model is compared with commonly used alternatives in an out-of-sample experiment.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This work proposes a method to examine variations in the cointegration relation between preferred and common stocks in the Brazilian stock market via Markovian regime switches. It aims on contributing for future works in "pairs trading" and, more specifically, to price discovery, given that, conditional on the state, the system is assumed stationary. This implies there exists a (conditional) moving average representation from which measures of "information share" (IS) could be extracted. For identification purposes, the Markov error correction model is estimated within a Bayesian MCMC framework. Inference and capability of detecting regime changes are shown using a Montecarlo experiment. I also highlight the necessity of modeling financial effects of high frequency data for reliable inference.