Comparison of Value-at-Risk using various empirical methods for the portfolios of BRICT and G-7 countries in the long run
diploma thesis (DEFENDED)
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/34246Identifiers
Study Information System: 92220
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- Kvalifikační práce [18149]
Author
Advisor
Referee
Gapko, Petr
Faculty / Institute
Faculty of Social Sciences
Discipline
Economics and Finance
Department
Institute of Economic Studies
Date of defense
8. 9. 2010
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta sociálních vědLanguage
English
Grade
Very good
This master's thesis deals with Value-at-Risk for equity portfolios. The distribution of daily returns of equity returns is not perfectly normal. Therefore, the use of the Delta- Normal Value-at-Risk (VaR) method is misleading. Accuracy of estimation may turn out to be failure for portfolios to measure VaR time to time. Therefore, two further methods, Modified VaR and Filtered Historical Simulation, are used for VaR estimation. The former estimates using Cornish-Fisher (1937) expansion and then the latter estimates using autoregressive model for mean equation, EGARCH for volatility and Filtered Historical Simulation (FHS) for VaR estimation i.e. AR (1) - EGARCH (1,1) - FHS methods; and also the performance of both the VaR estimates with Delta- Normal VaR estimate are compared. Last but not the least the implementation of various methods are discussed and analyzed on the two passive historical index portfolios, which represent some of the most attractive financial markets in the world economy.
This master's thesis deals with Value-at-Risk for equity portfolios. The distribution of daily returns of equity returns is not perfectly normal. Therefore, the use of the Delta- Normal Value-at-Risk (VaR) method is misleading. Accuracy of estimation may turn out to be failure for portfolios to measure VaR time to time. Therefore, two further methods, Modified VaR and Filtered Historical Simulation, are used for VaR estimation. The former estimates using Cornish-Fisher (1937) expansion and then the latter estimates using autoregressive model for mean equation, EGARCH for volatility and Filtered Historical Simulation (FHS) for VaR estimation i.e. AR (1) - EGARCH (1,1) - FHS methods; and also the performance of both the VaR estimates with Delta- Normal VaR estimate are compared. Last but not the least the implementation of various methods are discussed and analyzed on the two passive historical index portfolios, which represent some of the most attractive financial markets in the world economy.