Testing the hypothesis that international equity market correlation increases in volatile times is a difficult exercise and misleading results have often been reported in the past because of a spurious relationship between correlation and volatility. Using "extreme value theory" to model the multivariate distribution tails, we derive the distribution of extreme correlation for a wide class of return distributions. Empirically, we reject the null hypothesis of multivariate normality for the negative tail, but not for the positive tail. We also find that correlation is not related to market volatility per se but to the market trend. Correlation increases in bear markets, but not in bull markets
In this article we apply the Extreme Value Theory (EVT) in order to estimate the Value-at-Risk (VaR)...
We consider impulse response functions to study the impact of both return and volatility on the corr...
In this article we apply the Extreme Value Theory (EVT) in order to estimate the Value-at-Risk (VaR)...
Cahier de Recherche du Groupe HEC Paris, n° 705Testing the hypothesis that international equity mark...
Testing the hypothesis that international equity market correlation increases in volatile times is a...
Cahier de Recherche du Groupe HEC Paris, n° 646Recent studies in international finance have shown th...
In this paper we study the dependence structure of extreme realization of returns between seven Asia...
In this paper we study the dependence structure of extreme realization of returns between seven Sout...
This study investigates the dependence structure of extreme realization of returns between the matur...
This study investigates the dependence structure of extreme realization of returns between the matur...
A number of studies have provided evidence of increased correlations in global financial market retu...
Abstract: The presence of tail dependencies invalidates the multivariate normality assumptions in po...
It is commonly believed that the correlations between stock returns increase in high volatility peri...
Extreme asset price movements appear to be more pronounced over time and have major consequences fo...
This paper examines the correlation across a number of international stock market indices. As correl...
In this article we apply the Extreme Value Theory (EVT) in order to estimate the Value-at-Risk (VaR)...
We consider impulse response functions to study the impact of both return and volatility on the corr...
In this article we apply the Extreme Value Theory (EVT) in order to estimate the Value-at-Risk (VaR)...
Cahier de Recherche du Groupe HEC Paris, n° 705Testing the hypothesis that international equity mark...
Testing the hypothesis that international equity market correlation increases in volatile times is a...
Cahier de Recherche du Groupe HEC Paris, n° 646Recent studies in international finance have shown th...
In this paper we study the dependence structure of extreme realization of returns between seven Asia...
In this paper we study the dependence structure of extreme realization of returns between seven Sout...
This study investigates the dependence structure of extreme realization of returns between the matur...
This study investigates the dependence structure of extreme realization of returns between the matur...
A number of studies have provided evidence of increased correlations in global financial market retu...
Abstract: The presence of tail dependencies invalidates the multivariate normality assumptions in po...
It is commonly believed that the correlations between stock returns increase in high volatility peri...
Extreme asset price movements appear to be more pronounced over time and have major consequences fo...
This paper examines the correlation across a number of international stock market indices. As correl...
In this article we apply the Extreme Value Theory (EVT) in order to estimate the Value-at-Risk (VaR)...
We consider impulse response functions to study the impact of both return and volatility on the corr...
In this article we apply the Extreme Value Theory (EVT) in order to estimate the Value-at-Risk (VaR)...