It has been well documented that the empirical distribution of daily logarithmic returns from financial market variables is characterized by excess kurtosis and skewness. In order to capture such properties in financial data, heavy-tailed and asymmetric distributions are required to overcome shortfalls of the widely exhausted classical normality assumption. In the context of financial forecasting and risk management, the accuracy in modeling the underlying returns distribution plays a vital role. For example, risk management tools such as value-at-risk (VaR) are highly dependent on the underlying distributional assumption, with particular focus being placed at the extreme tails. Hence, identifying a distribution that best captures all aspec...
Extreme equity market returns demand the use of specialised techniques for standardised treatment th...
Using regular variation to define heavy tailed distributions, we show that prominent downside risk m...
Abstract: This study defines systematic tail risk as a stock’s exposure to market tail events and as...
Master of Science in Statistics. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2016.Estimating Value-at-risk (...
The daily returns from financial market variables, such as stock indices, exhibit empirical distribu...
Many of financial engineering theories are based on so-called “complete markets” and on the use of t...
South Africa is a cornucopia of mineral riches and the performance of its mining industry has signif...
Many of the concepts in theoretical and empirical finance developed over the past decades – includin...
A conditionally heteroskedastic time series model for certain South African stock price returns The ...
This article aims at underlying the importance of a correct modelling of the heavy-tail behavior of ...
This paper assesses the impact of systematic tail risk of stocks, defined as a stock’s exposure to m...
In recent research we can observe that statistical extreme value theory has been successfully used f...
The ability of the Generalised Extreme Value (GEV) and Generalised Logistic (GL) distributions to fi...
The essence of the Value-at-Risk (VaR) and Expected Shortfall (ES) computations is estimation of low...
This paper investigates estimation of extreme risk in a number of stock markets in the Gulf Coopera...
Extreme equity market returns demand the use of specialised techniques for standardised treatment th...
Using regular variation to define heavy tailed distributions, we show that prominent downside risk m...
Abstract: This study defines systematic tail risk as a stock’s exposure to market tail events and as...
Master of Science in Statistics. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2016.Estimating Value-at-risk (...
The daily returns from financial market variables, such as stock indices, exhibit empirical distribu...
Many of financial engineering theories are based on so-called “complete markets” and on the use of t...
South Africa is a cornucopia of mineral riches and the performance of its mining industry has signif...
Many of the concepts in theoretical and empirical finance developed over the past decades – includin...
A conditionally heteroskedastic time series model for certain South African stock price returns The ...
This article aims at underlying the importance of a correct modelling of the heavy-tail behavior of ...
This paper assesses the impact of systematic tail risk of stocks, defined as a stock’s exposure to m...
In recent research we can observe that statistical extreme value theory has been successfully used f...
The ability of the Generalised Extreme Value (GEV) and Generalised Logistic (GL) distributions to fi...
The essence of the Value-at-Risk (VaR) and Expected Shortfall (ES) computations is estimation of low...
This paper investigates estimation of extreme risk in a number of stock markets in the Gulf Coopera...
Extreme equity market returns demand the use of specialised techniques for standardised treatment th...
Using regular variation to define heavy tailed distributions, we show that prominent downside risk m...
Abstract: This study defines systematic tail risk as a stock’s exposure to market tail events and as...