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Bayesian modeling and forecasting of Value‐at‐Risk via threshold realized volatility
Author(s) -
Chen Cathy W.S.,
Watanabe Toshiaki
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
applied stochastic models in business and industry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.413
H-Index - 40
eISSN - 1526-4025
pISSN - 1524-1904
DOI - 10.1002/asmb.2395
Subject(s) - autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity , econometrics , volatility (finance) , financial models with long tailed distributions and volatility clustering , heteroscedasticity , forward volatility , value at risk , autoregressive model , stochastic volatility , realized variance , implied volatility , markov chain monte carlo , economics , bayesian probability , mathematics , statistics , risk management , finance
Abstract This study proposes a threshold realized generalized autoregressive conditional heteroscedastic (GARCH) model that jointly models daily returns and realized volatility, thereby taking into account the bias and asymmetry of realized volatility. We incorporate this threshold realized GARCH model with skew Student‐t innovations as the observation equation, view this model as a sharp transition model, and treat the realized volatility as a proxy for volatility under this nonlinear structure. Through the Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo method, the model can jointly estimate the parameters in the return equation, the volatility equation, and the measurement equation. As an illustration, we conduct a simulation study and apply the proposed method to the US and Japan stock markets. Based on quantile forecasting and volatility estimation, we find that the threshold heteroskedastic framework with realized volatility successfully models the asymmetric dynamic structure. We also investigate the predictive ability of volatility by comparing the proposed model with the traditional GARCH model as well as some popular asymmetric GARCH and realized GARCH models. This threshold realized GARCH model with skew Student‐t innovations outperforms the competing risk models in out‐of‐sample volatility and Value‐at‐Risk forecasting.

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