Abstract

 
 

References (31)



 
 

Citations (3)



 


 



The Performance of Johnson Distributions for Computing Value at Risk and Expected Shortfall


Jean-Guy Simonato


HEC Montréal

May 25, 2011


Abstract:     
The Gram-Charlier and Cornish-Fisher expansions are tools often used to compute value at risk (VaR) in the context of skewed and leptokurtic return distributions. These approximations use the first four moments of the unknown target distribution to compute approximate distribution and quantile functions. A drawback of these approaches is the limited set of skewness and kurtosis pairs for which valid approximations are possible. We examine here an alternative to these methods with the Johnson [1949] system of distributions which also uses the first four moments as main inputs but is capable of accommodating all possible skewness and kurtosis pairs. Formulas for the expected shortfall are derived. The performance of the Cornish-Fisher, Gram-Charlier and Johnson approaches for computing value at risk and expected shortfall are compared and documented. The results reveal that Johnson distributions yield smaller approximation errors than the Gram-Charlier and Cornish-Fisher approaches when used with exact or estimated moments.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 38

Keywords: VaR, Expected Shortfall, Johnson distributions

working papers series


Download This Paper

Date posted: November 10, 2010 ; Last revised: May 27, 2011

Suggested Citation

Simonato, Jean-Guy, The Performance of Johnson Distributions for Computing Value at Risk and Expected Shortfall (May 25, 2011). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1706409 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1706409

Contact Information

Jean-Guy Simonato (Contact Author)
HEC Montréal ( email )
3000, chemin de la Cote-Sainte-Catherine
Service de l'enseignement de la finance
Montreal, Quebec H3T 2A7
Canada
514-340-6807 (Phone)
514-340-5632 (Fax)
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


Paper statistics
Abstract Views: 644
Downloads: 168
Download Rank: 88,250
References:  31
Citations:  3

© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.  FAQ   Terms of Use   Privacy Policy   Copyright
This page was processed by apollo5 in 0.469 seconds