Comparison of the Korean and US Stock Markets Using Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Models†

We estimate three continuous-time stochastic volatility models following the approach by Aït-Sahalia and Kimmel (2007) to compare the Korean and US stock markets. To do this, the Heston, GARCH, and CEV models are applied to the KOSPI 200 and S&P 500 Index. For the latent volatility variable, we...

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Main Author: CHOI, SEUNGMOON
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea Development Institute 2018-11-01
Series:KDI Journal of Economic Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.23895/kdijep.2018.40.4.1
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spelling doaj-ce81d3f7106c46bbae7e77e3547990312020-11-25T02:46:22ZengKorea Development InstituteKDI Journal of Economic Policy2586-29952586-41302018-11-0140412210.23895/kdijep.2018.40.4.1Comparison of the Korean and US Stock Markets Using Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Models†CHOI, SEUNGMOON0Associate Professor, School of Economics, University of Seoul We estimate three continuous-time stochastic volatility models following the approach by Aït-Sahalia and Kimmel (2007) to compare the Korean and US stock markets. To do this, the Heston, GARCH, and CEV models are applied to the KOSPI 200 and S&P 500 Index. For the latent volatility variable, we generate and use the integrated volatility proxy using the implied volatility of short-dated at-the-money option prices. We conduct MLE in order to estimate the parameters of the stochastic volatility models. To do this we need the transition probability density function (TPDF), but the true TPDF is not available for any of the models in this paper. Therefore, the TPDFs are approximated using the irreducible method introduced in Aït-Sahalia (2008). Among three stochastic volatility models, the Heston model and the CEV model are found to be best for the Korean and US stock markets, respectively. There exist relatively strong leverage effects in both countries. Despite the fact that the long-run mean level of the integrated volatility proxy (IV) was not statistically significant in either market, the speeds of the mean reversion parameters are statistically significant and meaningful in both markets. The IV is found to return to its long-run mean value more rapidly in Korea than in the US. All parameters related to the volatility function of the IV are statistically significant. Although the volatility of the IV is more elastic in the US stock market, the volatility itself is greater in Korea than in the US over the range of the observed IV.https://doi.org/10.23895/kdijep.2018.40.4.1Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility ModelIntegrated Volatility ProxyMaximum Likelihood Estimation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author CHOI, SEUNGMOON
spellingShingle CHOI, SEUNGMOON
Comparison of the Korean and US Stock Markets Using Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Models†
KDI Journal of Economic Policy
Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Model
Integrated Volatility Proxy
Maximum Likelihood Estimation
author_facet CHOI, SEUNGMOON
author_sort CHOI, SEUNGMOON
title Comparison of the Korean and US Stock Markets Using Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Models†
title_short Comparison of the Korean and US Stock Markets Using Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Models†
title_full Comparison of the Korean and US Stock Markets Using Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Models†
title_fullStr Comparison of the Korean and US Stock Markets Using Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Models†
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of the Korean and US Stock Markets Using Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Models†
title_sort comparison of the korean and us stock markets using continuous-time stochastic volatility models†
publisher Korea Development Institute
series KDI Journal of Economic Policy
issn 2586-2995
2586-4130
publishDate 2018-11-01
description We estimate three continuous-time stochastic volatility models following the approach by Aït-Sahalia and Kimmel (2007) to compare the Korean and US stock markets. To do this, the Heston, GARCH, and CEV models are applied to the KOSPI 200 and S&P 500 Index. For the latent volatility variable, we generate and use the integrated volatility proxy using the implied volatility of short-dated at-the-money option prices. We conduct MLE in order to estimate the parameters of the stochastic volatility models. To do this we need the transition probability density function (TPDF), but the true TPDF is not available for any of the models in this paper. Therefore, the TPDFs are approximated using the irreducible method introduced in Aït-Sahalia (2008). Among three stochastic volatility models, the Heston model and the CEV model are found to be best for the Korean and US stock markets, respectively. There exist relatively strong leverage effects in both countries. Despite the fact that the long-run mean level of the integrated volatility proxy (IV) was not statistically significant in either market, the speeds of the mean reversion parameters are statistically significant and meaningful in both markets. The IV is found to return to its long-run mean value more rapidly in Korea than in the US. All parameters related to the volatility function of the IV are statistically significant. Although the volatility of the IV is more elastic in the US stock market, the volatility itself is greater in Korea than in the US over the range of the observed IV.
topic Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Model
Integrated Volatility Proxy
Maximum Likelihood Estimation
url https://doi.org/10.23895/kdijep.2018.40.4.1
work_keys_str_mv AT choiseungmoon comparisonofthekoreanandusstockmarketsusingcontinuoustimestochasticvolatilitymodels
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