On the Elicitability and Risk Model Comparison of Emerging Markets Equities

被引:4
|
作者
Owusu Junior, Peterson [1 ]
Alagidede, Imhotep Paul [2 ,3 ]
Tiwari, Aviral Kumar [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cape Coast, Sch Business, Dept Finance, Cape Coast, Ghana
[2] Univ Witwatersrand, Wits Business Sch, 2 St Davids Pl, ZA-2193 Johannesburg, South Africa
[3] Simon Diedong Dombo Univ Integrated Dev Studies, Wa, Ghana
[4] Rajagiri Business Sch, Kochi 682039, Kerala, India
关键词
elicitability; model confidence set; model homogeneity; time-varying risk; VALUE-AT-RISK; GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS; EXPECTED SHORTFALL; REALITY CHECK; VOLATILITY; PERFORMANCE;
D O I
10.3390/mca26030063
中图分类号
O1 [数学];
学科分类号
0701 ; 070101 ;
摘要
The need for comparative backtesting in the Basel III framework presents the challenge for ranking of internal value-at-risk (VaR) and expected shortfall (ES) models. We use a joint loss function to score the elicitable joint VaR and ES models to select competing tail risk models for the top 9 emerging markets equities and the emerging markets composite index. We achieve this with the model confidence set (MCS) procedure. Our analysis span two sub-sample periods representing turbulent (Eurozone and Global Financial crises periods) and tranquil (post-Global Financial crisis period) market conditions. We find that many of the markets risk models are time-invariant and independent of market conditions. But for China and South Africa this is not true because their risk models are time-varying, market conditions-dependent, percentile-dependent and heterogeneous. Tail risk modelling may be difficult compared to other markets. The resemblance between China and South Africa can stem from the closeness between their equities composition. However, generally, there is evidence of more homogeneity than heterogeneity in risk models. This is indicated by a minimum of three models (out of six) per equity in most of the countries. This may ease the burden for risk managers to find the optimal set of models. Our study is important for internal risk modelling, regulatory oversight, reduce regulatory arbitrage and may bolster confidence in international investors with respect to emerging markets equities.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Downside Risk in Emerging Markets
    Atilgan, Yigit
    Demirtas, K. Ozgur
    EMERGING MARKETS FINANCE AND TRADE, 2013, 49 (03) : 65 - 83
  • [12] Idiosyncratic Risk in Emerging Markets
    Angelidis, Timotheos
    FINANCIAL REVIEW, 2010, 45 (04) : 1053 - 1078
  • [13] Risk in emerging markets revisited
    Goetzmann, WN
    Jorion, P
    EMERGING MARKET CAPITAL FLOWS, 1998, 2 : 193 - 197
  • [14] Rethinking emerging market equities
    Smith, RC
    Walter, I
    EMERGING MARKET CAPITAL FLOWS, 1998, 2 : 85 - 105
  • [15] Coherence, connectedness and dynamic hedging effectiveness between emerging markets equities and commodity index funds
    Singh, Jitendra
    Ahmad, Wasim
    Mishra, Anil
    RESOURCES POLICY, 2019, 61 : 441 - 460
  • [16] CONTROL MODEL FOR MANAGING RISK IN SMALL MANUFACTURING ORGANIZATIONS IN EMERGING MARKETS
    Cabana, Jairo Alberto Olarte
    Franco, Jaime Andrey Loaiza
    AD-MINISTER, 2023, (43)
  • [17] A model of crises in emerging markets
    Dooley, MP
    ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 2000, 110 (460): : 256 - 272
  • [18] A comprehensive evaluation of value-at-risk models and a comparison of their performance in emerging markets
    Shaker-Akhtekhane, Saeed
    Seighali, Mohsen
    Poorabbas, Solmaz
    JOURNAL OF RISK MODEL VALIDATION, 2018, 12 (04): : 1 - 16
  • [19] Risk Measures: Robustness, Elicitability, and Backtesting
    He, Xue Dong
    Kou, Steven
    Peng, Xianhua
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF STATISTICS AND ITS APPLICATION, 2022, 9 : 141 - 166
  • [20] Emerging Markets: Strategy for Risk Mitigation
    Kools, Willem
    BIOPHARM INTERNATIONAL, 2017, 30 (10) : 24 - 24