Two Essays in Financial Economics

The following dissertation contains two distinct empirical essays which contribute to the overall field of Financial Economics. Chapter 1, entitled “The Determinants of Dynamic Dependence: An Analysis of Commodity Futures and Equity Markets,” examines the determinants of the dynamic equity-commodity...

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Main Author: Putnam, Kyle J
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks@UNO 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/2010
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3054&context=td
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spelling ndltd-uno.edu-oai-scholarworks.uno.edu-td-30542016-10-21T17:07:21Z Two Essays in Financial Economics Putnam, Kyle J The following dissertation contains two distinct empirical essays which contribute to the overall field of Financial Economics. Chapter 1, entitled “The Determinants of Dynamic Dependence: An Analysis of Commodity Futures and Equity Markets,” examines the determinants of the dynamic equity-commodity return correlations between five commodity futures sub-sectors (energy, foods and fibers, grains and oilseeds, livestock, and precious metals) and a value-weighted equity market index (S&P 500). The study utilizes the traditional DCC model, as well as three time-varying copulas: (i) the normal copula, (ii) the student’s t copula, and (iii) the rotated-gumbel copula as dependence measures. Subsequently, the determinants of these various dependence measures are explored by analyzing several macroeconomic, financial, and speculation variables over different sample periods. Results indicate that the dynamic equity-commodity correlations for the energy, grains and oilseeds, precious metals, and to a lesser extent the foods and fibers, sub-sectors have become increasingly explainable by broad macroeconomic and financial market indicators, particularly after May 2003. Furthermore, these variables exhibit heterogeneous effects in terms of both magnitude and sign on each sub-sectors’ equity-commodity correlation structure. Interestingly, the effects of increased financial market speculation are found to be extremely varied among the five sub-sectors. These results have important implications for portfolio selection, price formation, and risk management. Chapter 2, entitled, “US Community Bank Failure: An Empirical Investigation,” examines the declining, but still pivotal role, of the US community banking industry. The study utilizes survival analysis to determine which accounting and macroeconomic variables help to predict community bank failure. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Federal Reserve Bank data are utilized to compare 452 community banks which failed between 2000 and 2013, relative to a sample of surviving community banks. Empirical results indicate that smaller banks are less likely to fail than their larger community bank counterparts. Additionally, several unique bank-specific indicators of failure emerge which relate to asset quality and liquidity, as well as earnings ratios. Moreover, results show that the use of the macroeconomic indicator of liquidity, the TED spread, provides a substantial improvement in modeling predictive community bank failure. 2015-05-15T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/2010 http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3054&context=td University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations ScholarWorks@UNO Dynamic Dependence Commodity Futures Copulas Failure Risk US Community Banks Survival Analysis Finance and Financial Management Statistical Models Survival Analysis
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Dynamic Dependence
Commodity Futures
Copulas
Failure Risk
US Community Banks
Survival Analysis
Finance and Financial Management
Statistical Models
Survival Analysis
spellingShingle Dynamic Dependence
Commodity Futures
Copulas
Failure Risk
US Community Banks
Survival Analysis
Finance and Financial Management
Statistical Models
Survival Analysis
Putnam, Kyle J
Two Essays in Financial Economics
description The following dissertation contains two distinct empirical essays which contribute to the overall field of Financial Economics. Chapter 1, entitled “The Determinants of Dynamic Dependence: An Analysis of Commodity Futures and Equity Markets,” examines the determinants of the dynamic equity-commodity return correlations between five commodity futures sub-sectors (energy, foods and fibers, grains and oilseeds, livestock, and precious metals) and a value-weighted equity market index (S&P 500). The study utilizes the traditional DCC model, as well as three time-varying copulas: (i) the normal copula, (ii) the student’s t copula, and (iii) the rotated-gumbel copula as dependence measures. Subsequently, the determinants of these various dependence measures are explored by analyzing several macroeconomic, financial, and speculation variables over different sample periods. Results indicate that the dynamic equity-commodity correlations for the energy, grains and oilseeds, precious metals, and to a lesser extent the foods and fibers, sub-sectors have become increasingly explainable by broad macroeconomic and financial market indicators, particularly after May 2003. Furthermore, these variables exhibit heterogeneous effects in terms of both magnitude and sign on each sub-sectors’ equity-commodity correlation structure. Interestingly, the effects of increased financial market speculation are found to be extremely varied among the five sub-sectors. These results have important implications for portfolio selection, price formation, and risk management. Chapter 2, entitled, “US Community Bank Failure: An Empirical Investigation,” examines the declining, but still pivotal role, of the US community banking industry. The study utilizes survival analysis to determine which accounting and macroeconomic variables help to predict community bank failure. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Federal Reserve Bank data are utilized to compare 452 community banks which failed between 2000 and 2013, relative to a sample of surviving community banks. Empirical results indicate that smaller banks are less likely to fail than their larger community bank counterparts. Additionally, several unique bank-specific indicators of failure emerge which relate to asset quality and liquidity, as well as earnings ratios. Moreover, results show that the use of the macroeconomic indicator of liquidity, the TED spread, provides a substantial improvement in modeling predictive community bank failure.
author Putnam, Kyle J
author_facet Putnam, Kyle J
author_sort Putnam, Kyle J
title Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_short Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_full Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_fullStr Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_full_unstemmed Two Essays in Financial Economics
title_sort two essays in financial economics
publisher ScholarWorks@UNO
publishDate 2015
url http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/2010
http://scholarworks.uno.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3054&context=td
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