Publication | Closed Access
A Comparison of Seasonal Adjustment Methods When Forecasting Intraday Volatility
120
Citations
10
References
2002
Year
Flexible Fourier FormForecasting MethodologyVolatility ModelingEngineeringU.s. DollarTime Series EconometricsEconomic ForecastingAsset PricingFinancial Time Series AnalysisStatisticsSpot Exchange RatesPredictive AnalyticsForecastingIntraday VolatilityFinanceFinancial EconomicsExchange Rate MovementBusinessEconometricsHigh-frequency Financial Econometrics
Abstract In this article we compare volatility forecasts over a thirty‐minute horizon for the spot exchange rates of the Deutsche mark and the Japanese yen against the U.S. dollar. Explicitly modeling the intraday seasonal pattern improves the out‐of‐sample forecasting performance. We find that a seasonal estimated from the log of squared returns improves with the use of simple squared returns, and that the flexible Fourier form (FFF) is an efficient way of determining the seasonal. The two‐step approach that first estimates the seasonal using the FFF and then the parameters of the generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH) model for the deseasonalized returns performs only marginally worse than the computationally expensive periodic GARCH model that includes the FFF.
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