The sample skewness and kurtosis of macroeconomic and financial time series are routinely scrutinized in the early stages of model-building and are often the central topic of studies in economics and finance. Notwithstanding the availability of several robust estimators, most scholars in economics rely on method-of-moments estimation that is known to be very sensitive to outliers. We carry out an extensive Monte Carlo analysis to evaluate the bias and root mean squared error of 12 different estimators of skewness and kurtosis. We consider nine statistical distributions that approximate the range of data generating processes of many macroeconomic and financial time series. Both in independently and identically distributed samples and in data...
We reconsider the derivation of Blest’s (2003) skewness adjusted version of the classical moment-bas...
The main aim of our research is to investigate how higher order moments of distribution such as syst...
This research is an exposition of D. N. Joanes and C. A. Gill\u27s study on Comparing Measures of Sa...
Abstract: For both the academic and the financial communities it is a familiar stylized fact that st...
For both the academic and the financial communities it is a familiar stylized fact that stock market...
We derive the approximate results for two standardized measures of deviation from normality, namely,...
Central moments and cumulants are often employed to characterize the distribution of data. The skewn...
This article extends the variance ratio test of Lo and MacKinlay (1988) to tests of skewness and kur...
If we know the statistics of central tendency and dispersion, we still cannot nature a complete desi...
Several measures of skewness and kurtosis were proposed by Hogg (1974) in order to reduce the bias ...
We present the sampling distributions for the coefficient of skewness, kurtosis, and a joint test of...
The purpose of this study is to explore the impact of skewness in asset return simulations and the e...
Past financial crises show the importance of adequate risk measurement techniques which adapt more r...
On the ground of a highly dynamic economic environment, the necessity for time-varying risk measures...
The recent advent of high-frequency data has given rise to the notion of realized skewness and reali...
We reconsider the derivation of Blest’s (2003) skewness adjusted version of the classical moment-bas...
The main aim of our research is to investigate how higher order moments of distribution such as syst...
This research is an exposition of D. N. Joanes and C. A. Gill\u27s study on Comparing Measures of Sa...
Abstract: For both the academic and the financial communities it is a familiar stylized fact that st...
For both the academic and the financial communities it is a familiar stylized fact that stock market...
We derive the approximate results for two standardized measures of deviation from normality, namely,...
Central moments and cumulants are often employed to characterize the distribution of data. The skewn...
This article extends the variance ratio test of Lo and MacKinlay (1988) to tests of skewness and kur...
If we know the statistics of central tendency and dispersion, we still cannot nature a complete desi...
Several measures of skewness and kurtosis were proposed by Hogg (1974) in order to reduce the bias ...
We present the sampling distributions for the coefficient of skewness, kurtosis, and a joint test of...
The purpose of this study is to explore the impact of skewness in asset return simulations and the e...
Past financial crises show the importance of adequate risk measurement techniques which adapt more r...
On the ground of a highly dynamic economic environment, the necessity for time-varying risk measures...
The recent advent of high-frequency data has given rise to the notion of realized skewness and reali...
We reconsider the derivation of Blest’s (2003) skewness adjusted version of the classical moment-bas...
The main aim of our research is to investigate how higher order moments of distribution such as syst...
This research is an exposition of D. N. Joanes and C. A. Gill\u27s study on Comparing Measures of Sa...