Training course for PhD/Master students

Youssef Saidi

Economic Research Division, Gulf Monetary Council, Saudi Arabia.

Short Bio:  Youssef SAIDI is an Experienced Quantitative Economist-Econometrician. He is currently an Economic Adviser at Gulf Monetary Council (GMCo). Before joining GMCo, he was an Invited Researcher at LEM-CNRS (UMR 9221) - Lille and Economist-Manager at Bank Al-Maghrib (Central Bank of Morocco). Previously, he was an Assistant Professor of statistics and econometrics at Mohammed V University in Rabat (Morocco). He also taught mathematics, statistics, econometrics, and Computer Science (SAS, EViews, Rats) at Universities Lille and Valenciennes (France). He has conducted several seminars in forecasting techniques in Morocco, the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UMOA) and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).  

His research focuses on monetary and exchange rate policies, monetary union, time series analysis, regime change models, forecasting techniques, financial markets, commodities, emerging economies, financial contagion. He is referee for several international academic journals including, Energy, Statistics and Probability Letters, North American Journal of Economics and Finance, Journal of Economic Asymmetries, etc.

Title:  An Introduction to Volatility Modeling (ARCH models)

(Slides)

Abstract: Volatility modeling plays an important role in many financial applications, and it has held the attention of academics and practitioners over the last four decades. Mandelbrot (1963) and Fama (1965) showed that stock market volatility exhibits the volatility clustering property, a phenomenon which has been modeled by Engle’s (1982) Autoregressive Conditional heteroscedasticity (ARCH) model and its extension, Bollerslev’s (1986) GARCH model. The construction of the two models ARCH and GARCH was in contradiction with the asymmetric properties of financial series (e.g., leverage effect). To address this problem, many nonlinear extensions ARCH model have been proposed such as EGARCH (Nelson 1991), PGARCH (Ding et al. 1993), TGARCH (Zakoian 1994), MS-ARCH (Hamilton, 1989; Francq, Roussignol, Zakoian 2001), and Self-Exciting Threshold ARCH (Saidi, 2003; Saidi and Zakoian, 2006). In the existing literature, there are more than 300 GARCH types (Hansen and Lunde, 2005).

In this course, we will present a quick introduction to the volatility modeling using univariate and multivariate Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity (ARCH) models and discuss their applications. The course will present in the fist part the statistical properties of financial time series and then review the probabilistic and statistical frameworks of some selected ARCH models.

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