A nonlinear threshold model for the dependence of extremes of stationary sequences

Author

Martínez Ibáñez, Oscar

Olmo, José

Other authors

Universitat Rovira i Virgili. Departament d'Economia

Publication date

2008



Abstract

One of the main implications of the efficient market hypothesis (EMH) is that expected future returns on financial assets are not predictable if investors are risk neutral. In this paper we argue that financial time series offer more information than that this hypothesis seems to supply. In particular we postulate that runs of very large returns can be predictable for small time periods. In order to prove this we propose a TAR(3,1)-GARCH(1,1) model that is able to describe two different types of extreme events: a first type generated by large uncertainty regimes where runs of extremes are not predictable and a second type where extremes come from isolated dread/joy events. This model is new in the literature in nonlinear processes. Its novelty resides on two features of the model that make it different from previous TAR methodologies. The regimes are motivated by the occurrence of extreme values and the threshold variable is defined by the shock affecting the process in the preceding period. In this way this model is able to uncover dependence and clustering of extremes in high as well as in low volatility periods. This model is tested with data from General Motors stocks prices corresponding to two crises that had a substantial impact in financial markets worldwide; the Black Monday of October 1987 and September 11th, 2001. By analyzing the periods around these crises we find evidence of statistical significance of our model and thereby of predictability of extremes for September 11th but not for Black Monday. These findings support the hypotheses of a big negative event producing runs of negative returns in the first case, and of the burst of a worldwide stock market bubble in the second example. JEL classification: C12; C15; C22; C51 Keywords and Phrases: asymmetries, crises, extreme values, hypothesis testing, leverage effect, nonlinearities, threshold models

Document Type

Working document

Language

English

CDU Subject

519.1 - Combinatorial analysis. Graph theory

Subject

Crisis financeres; Observacions aberrants (Estadística); Hipòtesi estadística -- Proves; Teories no-lineals

Pages

34

556842 bytes

Collection

Documents de treball del Departament d'Economia; 2008-02

Documents

DT.2008-2-.pdf

543.7Kb

 

Rights

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