13 resultados para Allele frequency data
em Repositório digital da Fundação Getúlio Vargas - FGV
Resumo:
This paper develops a framework to test whether discrete-valued irregularly-spaced financial transactions data follow a subordinated Markov process. For that purpose, we consider a specific optional sampling in which a continuous-time Markov process is observed only when it crosses some discrete level. This framework is convenient for it accommodates not only the irregular spacing of transactions data, but also price discreteness. Further, it turns out that, under such an observation rule, the current price duration is independent of previous price durations given the current price realization. A simple nonparametric test then follows by examining whether this conditional independence property holds. Finally, we investigate whether or not bid-ask spreads follow Markov processes using transactions data from the New York Stock Exchange. The motivation lies on the fact that asymmetric information models of market microstructures predict that the Markov property does not hold for the bid-ask spread. The results are mixed in the sense that the Markov assumption is rejected for three out of the five stocks we have analyzed.
Resumo:
Aiming at empirical findings, this work focuses on applying the HEAVY model for daily volatility with financial data from the Brazilian market. Quite similar to GARCH, this model seeks to harness high frequency data in order to achieve its objectives. Four variations of it were then implemented and their fit compared to GARCH equivalents, using metrics present in the literature. Results suggest that, in such a market, HEAVY does seem to specify daily volatility better, but not necessarily produces better predictions for it, what is, normally, the ultimate goal. The dataset used in this work consists of intraday trades of U.S. Dollar and Ibovespa future contracts from BM&FBovespa.
Resumo:
Real exchange rate is an important macroeconomic price in the economy and a ects economic activity, interest rates, domestic prices, trade and investiments ows among other variables. Methodologies have been developed in empirical exchange rate misalignment studies to evaluate whether a real e ective exchange is overvalued or undervalued. There is a vast body of literature on the determinants of long-term real exchange rates and on empirical strategies to implement the equilibrium norms obtained from theoretical models. This study seeks to contribute to this literature by showing that it is possible to calculate the misalignment from a mixed ointegrated vector error correction framework. An empirical exercise using United States' real exchange rate data is performed. The results suggest that the model with mixed frequency data is preferred to the models with same frequency variables
Resumo:
This paper investigates the impact of price limits on the Brazil- ian future markets using high frequency data. The aim is to identify whether there is a cool-off or a magnet effect. For that purpose, we examine a tick-by-tick data set that includes all contracts on the São Paulo stock index futures traded on the Brazilian Mercantile and Futures Exchange from January 1997 to December 1999. Our main finding is that price limits drive back prices as they approach the lower limit. There is a strong cool-off effect of the lower limit on the conditional mean, whereas the upper limit seems to entail a weak magnet effect on the conditional variance. We then build a trading strategy that accounts for the cool-off effect so as to demonstrate that the latter has not only statistical, but also economic signifi- cance. The resulting Sharpe ratio indeed is way superior to the buy-and-hold benchmarks we consider.
Resumo:
The initial endogenous growth models emphasized the importance of externaI effects in explaining sustainable growth across time. Empirically, this hypothesis can be confirmed if the coefficient of physical capital per hour is unity in the aggregate production function. Although cross-section results concur with theory, previous estimates using time series data rejected this hypothesis, showing a small coefficient far from unity. It seems that the problem lies not with the theory but with the techniques employed, which are unable to capture low frequency movements in high frequency data. This paper uses cointegration - a technique designed to capture the existence of long-run relationships in multivariate time series - to test the externalities hypothesis of endogenous growth. The results confirm the theory' and conform to previous cross-section estimates. We show that there is long-run proportionality between output per hour and a measure of capital per hour. U sing this result, we confmn the hypothesis that the implied Solow residual can be explained by government expenditures on infra-structure, which suggests a supply side role for government affecting productivity and a decrease on the extent that the Solow residual explains the variation of output.
Resumo:
Initial endogenous growth models emphasized the importance of external effects and increasing retums in explaining growth. Empirically, this hypothesis can be confumed if the coefficient of physical capital per hour is unity in the aggregate production function. Previous estimates using time series data rejected this hypothesis, although cross-country estimates did nol The problem lies with the techniques employed, which are unable to capture low-frequency movements of high-frequency data. Using cointegration, new time series evidence confum the theory and conform to cross-country evidence. The implied Solow residual, which takes into account externaI effects to aggregate capital, has its behavior analyzed. The hypothesis that it is explained by government expenditures on infrasttucture is confIrmed. This suggests a supply-side role for government affecting productivity.
Resumo:
This paper investigates the impact of price limits on the Brazilian futures markets using high frequency data. The aim is to identify whether there is a cool-off or a magnet effect. For that purpose, we examine a tick-by-tick data set that includes all contracts on the S˜ao Paulo stock index futures traded on the Brazilian Mercantile and Futures Exchange from January 1997 to December 1999. The results indicate that the conditional mean features a floor cool-off effect, whereas the conditional variance significantly increases as the price approaches the upper limit. We then build a trading strategy that accounts for the cool-off effect in the conditional mean so as to demonstrate that the latter has not only statistical, but also economic significance. The in-sample Sharpe ratio indeed is way superior to the buy-and-hold benchmarks we consider, whereas out-of-sample results evince similar performances.
Resumo:
Este trabalho tem por objetivo avaliar a eficiência do mercado acionário brasileiro a partir de testes estatísticos, para posterior modelagem das séries de retorno das ações, utilizando os modelos ARMA, ARCH, GARCH, Modelo de Decomposição e, por final, VAR. Para este trabalho foram coletados dados intradiários, que são considerados dados de alta freqüência e menos suscetíveis a possíveis alterações na estrutura de mercado, tanto micro como macroeconômicos. Optou-se por trabalhar com dados coletados a cada cinco minutos, devido à baixa liquidez dos ativos no mercado financeiro (que poderia acarretar em dados ausentes para intervalos de tempo inferiores). As séries escolhidas foram: Petrobrás PN, Gerdau PN, Bradesco PN, Vale do Rio Doce PN e o índice Ibovespa, que apresentam grande representatividade do mercado acionário brasileiro para o período analisado. Com base no teste de Dickey-Fuller, verificou-se indícios que o mercado acionário brasileiro possa ser eficiente e, assim foi proposto modelos para as séries de retorno das ações anteriormente citadas.
Resumo:
O objetivo do presente trabalho é analisar as características empíricas de uma série de retornos de dados em alta freqüência para um dos ativos mais negociados na Bolsa de Valores de São Paulo. Estamos interessados em modelar a volatilidade condicional destes retornos, testando em particular a presença de memória longa, entre outros fenômenos que caracterizam este tipo de dados. Nossa investigação revela que além da memória longa, existe forte sazonalidade intradiária, mas não encontramos evidências de um fato estilizado de retornos de ações, o efeito alavancagem. Utilizamos modelos capazes de captar a memória longa na variância condicional dos retornos dessazonalizados, com resultados superiores a modelos tradicionais de memória curta, com implicações importantes para precificação de opções e de risco de mercado
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).
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.
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.
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.