Extreme Asymmetric Volatility: Stress and Aggregate Asset Prices
43 Pages Posted: 25 Feb 2009 Last revised: 21 Jun 2015
There are 2 versions of this paper
Extreme Asymmetric Volatility: Stress and Aggregate Asset Prices
Extreme Asymmetric Volatility, Leverage, Feedback and Asset Prices
Date Written: January 22, 2015
Abstract
Asymmetric volatility in equity markets has been widely documented in finance (Bekaert and Wu (2000)). We study asymmetric volatility for daily S&P 500 index returns and VIX index changes, thereby examining the relation between extreme changes in risk-neutral volatility expectations, i.e. market stress, and aggregate asset prices. To this aim, we model market returns, implied VIX market volatility and volatility of volatility, showing that the latter is asymmetric in that past positive volatility shocks drive positive shocks to volatility of volatility. Our main result documents the existence of a significant extreme asymmetric volatility effect as we find contemporaneous volatility-return tail dependence for crashes but not for booms. We then outline aggregate market price implications of extreme asymmetric volatility, indicating that under volatility feedback a one-in-a-hundred trading day innovation to average VIX implied volatility, for example, relates to an expected market drop of more than 4 percent.
Keywords: market volatility, asymmetric volatility, leverage effect, volatility feedback, market stress, financial stability, systemic risk, extreme volatility, aggregate asset prices;
JEL Classification: C32, G10, G32
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Impact of Trades on Daily Volatility
By Doron Avramov, Tarun Chordia, ...
-
Priced Risk and Asymmetric Volatility in the Cross-Section of Skewness
By Robert F. Engle and Abhishek Mistry
-
Why are Stock Returns and Volatility Negatively Correlated?
By Jinho Bae, Chang-jin Kim, ...
-
The Skewness Premium and the Asymmetric Volatility Puzzle
By Canlin Li
-
Components of Bull and Bear Markets: Bull Corrections and Bear Rallies
By John M. Maheu, Thomas H. Mccurdy, ...
-
Financial Leverage Does Not Cause the Leverage Effect
By Abdullah C. Aydemir, Michael F. Gallmeyer, ...
-
Surprise Volume and Heteroskedasticity in Equity Market Returns
By Niklas Wagner and Terry Marsh