Using High-Frequency Data in Dynamic Portfolio Choice
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3539871
DOI10.1080/07474930701870461zbMath1359.91030OpenAlexW2081074119MaRDI QIDQ3539871
Jeffrey R. Russell, Yinghua Zhu, Federico M. Bandi
Publication date: 19 November 2008
Published in: Econometric Reviews (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/07474930701870461
Related Items (16)
Forecasting correlations during the late-2000s financial crisis: the short-run component, the long-run component, and structural breaks ⋮ DYNAMIC MODELING OF HIGH-DIMENSIONAL CORRELATION MATRICES IN FINANCE ⋮ Realized volatility forecasting and option pricing ⋮ Efficient estimation of stochastic volatility using noisy observations: a multi-scale approach ⋮ On asset-allocation and high-frequency data: are there financial gains from using different covariance estimators? ⋮ A generalized heterogeneous autoregressive model using market information ⋮ Jump robust daily covariance estimation by disentangling variance and correlation components ⋮ Realized Volatility and Long Memory: An Overview ⋮ Realized Volatility: A Review ⋮ Predicting the Daily Covariance Matrix for S&P 100 Stocks Using Intraday Data—But Which Frequency to Use? ⋮ Forecasting the volatility of crude oil futures using intraday data ⋮ Assessing the quality of volatility estimators via option pricing ⋮ Modeling and forecasting (un)reliable realized covariances for more reliable financial decisions ⋮ Realized volatility forecasting and market microstructure noise ⋮ Capturing volatility persistence: a dynamically complete realized EGARCH-MIDAS model ⋮ Estimating correlation and covariance matrices by weighting of market similarity
Cites Work
- THE ESTIMATION AND APPLICATION OF LONG MEMORY TIME SERIES MODELS
- Realized Volatility: A Review
- Predicting the Daily Covariance Matrix for S&P 100 Stocks Using Intraday Data—But Which Frequency to Use?
- Realized Beta: Persistence and Predictability
- Modeling and Forecasting Realized Volatility
- Econometric Analysis of Realized Covariation: High Frequency Based Covariance, Regression, and Correlation in Financial Economics
- A Tale of Two Time Scales
This page was built for publication: Using High-Frequency Data in Dynamic Portfolio Choice