1,703 research outputs found

    A nonparametric copula based test for conditional independence with applications to granger causality

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    This paper proposes a new nonparametric test for conditional independence, which is based on the comparison of Bernstein copula densities using the Hellinger distance. The test is easy to implement because it does not involve a weighting function in the test statistic, and it can be applied in general settings since there is no restriction on the dimension of the data. In fact, to apply the test, only a bandwidth is needed for the nonparametric copula. We prove that the test statistic is asymptotically pivotal under the null hypothesis, establish local power properties, and motivate the validity of the bootstrap technique that we use in finite sample settings. A simulation study illustrates the good size and power properties of the test. We illustrate the empirical relevance of our test by focusing on Granger causality using financial time series data to test for nonlinear leverage versus volatility feedback effects and to test for causality between stock returns and trading volume. In a third application, we investigate Granger causality between macroeconomic variablesNonparametric tests, Conditional independence, Granger non-causality, Bernstein density copula, Bootstrap, Finance, Volatility asymmetry, Leverage effect, Volatility feedback effect, Macroeconomics

    A Nonparametric Copula Based Test for Conditional Independence with Applications to Granger Causality

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    This paper proposes a new nonparametric test for conditional independence, which is based on the comparison of Bernstein copula densities using the Hellinger distance. The test is easy to implement because it does not involve a weighting function in the test statistic, and it can be applied in general settings since there is no restriction on the dimension of the data. In fact, to apply the test, only a bandwidth is needed for the nonparametric copula. We prove that the test statistic is asymptotically pivotal under the null hypothesis, establish local power properties, and motivate the validity of the bootstrap technique that we use in finite sample settings. A simulation study illustrates the good size and power properties of the test. We illustrate the empirical relevance of our test by focusing on Granger causality using financial time series data to test for nonlinear leverage versus volatility feedback effects and to test for causality between stock returns and trading volume. In a third application, we investigate Granger causality between macroeconomic variables.Nonparametric tests, conditional idependence, Granger non-causality, Bernstein density copula, bootstrap, finance, volatility asymmetry, leverage effect, volatility feedback effect, macroeconomics

    Nonparametric tests for conditional independence using conditional distributions

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    Financial support from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and from the Spanish Ministry of Education through grants SEJ 2007-63098 are also acknowledgedThe concept of causality is naturally defined in terms of conditional distribution, however almost all the empirical works focus on causality in mean. This paper aim to propose a nonparametric statistic to test the conditional independence and Granger non-causality between two variables conditionally on another one. The test statistic is based on the comparison of conditional distribution functions using an L2 metric. We use Nadaraya-Watson method to estimate the conditional distribution functions. We establish the asymptotic size and power properties of the test statistic and we motivate the validity of the local bootstrap. Further, we ran a simulation experiment to investigate the finite sample properties of the test and we illustrate its practical relevance by examining the Granger non-causality between S&P 500 Index returns and VIX volatility index. Contrary to the conventional t-test, which is based on a linear mean-regression model, we find that VIX index predicts excess returns both at short and long horizons

    A Nonparametric Copula Based Test for Conditional Independence with Applications to Granger Causality

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    This paper proposes a new nonparametric test for conditional independence, which is based on the comparison of Bernstein copula densities using the Hellinger distance. The test is easy to implement because it does not involve a weighting function in the test statistic, and it can be applied in general settings since there is no restriction on the dimension of the data. In fact, to apply the test, only a bandwidth is needed for the nonparametric copula. We prove that the test statistic is asymptotically pivotal under the null hypothesis, establish local power properties, and motivate the validity of the bootstrap technique that we use in finite sample settings. A simulation study illustrates the good size and power properties of the test. We illustrate the empirical relevance of our test by focusing on Granger causality using financial time series data to test for nonlinear leverage versus volatility feedback effects and to test for causality between stock returns and trading volume. In a third application, we investigate Granger causality between macroeconomic variables. Le présent document propose un nouveau test non paramétrique d’indépendance conditionnelle, lequel est fondé sur la comparaison des densités de la copule de Bernstein suivant la distance de Hellinger. Le test est facile à réaliser, du fait qu’il n’implique pas de fonction de pondération dans les variables utilisées et peut être appliqué dans des conditions générales puisqu’il n’y a pas de restriction sur l’étendue des données. En fait, dans le cas de la copule non paramétrique, l’application du test ne requiert qu’une largeur de bande. Nous démontrons que les variables utilisées pour le test jouent asymptotiquement un rôle crucial sous l’hypothèse nulle. Nous établissons aussi les propriétés des pouvoirs locaux et justifions la validité de la technique bootstrap (technique d’auto-amorçage) que nous utilisons dans les contextes où les échantillons sont de taille finie. Une étude par simulation illustre l’ampleur adéquate et la puissance du test. Nous démontrons la pertinence empirique de notre démarche en mettant l’accent sur les liens de causalité de Granger et en recourant à des séries temporelles de données financières pour vérifier l’effet de levier non linéaire, par opposition à l’effet de rétroaction de la volatilité, et la causalité entre le rendement des actions et le volume des transactions. Dans une troisième application, nous examinons les liens de causalité de Granger entre certaines variables macroéconomiques.Nonparametric tests, conditional independence, Granger non-causality, Bernstein density copula, bootstrap, finance, volatility asymmetry, leverage effect, volatility feedback effect, macroeconomics, tests non paramétriques, indépendance conditionnelle, non-causalité de Granger, copule de densité de Bernstein, bootstrap, finance, asymétrie de la volatilité, effet de levier, effet de rétroaction de la volatilité, macroéconomie.

    A nonparametric copula based test for conditional independence with applications to Granger causality

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    nonparametric tests, conditional independence, Granger non-causality, Bernstein density copula, bootstrap, finance, volatility asymmetry, leverage effect, volatility feedback effect, macroeconomics

    Partisan Conflict and Income Inequality in the United States: A Nonparametric Causality-in-Quantiles Approach

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    This paper examines the predictive power of a partisan conflict on income inequality. Our study contributes to the existing literature by using the newly introduced nonparametric causality-in-quantile testing approach to examine how political polarization in the United States affects several measures of income inequality and distribution overtime. The study uses annual time-series data between the periods 1917–2013. We find evidence in support of a dynamic causal relationship between partisan conflict and income inequality, except at the upper end of the quantiles. Our empirical findings suggest that a reduction in partisan conflict will lead to a reduction in our measures of income inequality, but this requires that inequality is not exceptionally high

    A new statistic and practical guidelines for nonparametric Granger causality testing

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    Upon illustrating how smoothing may cause over-rejection in nonparametric tests for Granger non-causality, we propose a new test statistic for which problems of this type can be avoided. We develop asymptotic theory for the new test statistic, and perform a simulation study to investigate the properties of the new test in comparison with its natural counterpart, the Hiemstra-Jones test. Our simulation results indicate that, if the bandwidth tends to zero at the appropriate rate as the sample size increases, the size of the new test remains close to nominal, while the power remains large. Transforming the time series to uniform marginals improves the behavior of both tests. In applications to Standard and Poor's index volumes and returns, the Hiemstra-Jones test suggests that volume Granger-causes returns. However, the evidence for this gets weaker if we carefully apply the recommendations suggested by our simulation study.

    Graphical Modeling for Multivariate Hawkes Processes with Nonparametric Link Functions

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    Hawkes (1971) introduced a powerful multivariate point process model of mutually exciting processes to explain causal structure in data. In this paper it is shown that the Granger causality structure of such processes is fully encoded in the corresponding link functions of the model. A new nonparametric estimator of the link functions based on a time-discretized version of the point process is introduced by using an infinite order autoregression. Consistency of the new estimator is derived. The estimator is applied to simulated data and to neural spike train data from the spinal dorsal horn of a rat.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure

    The Nonlinear Dynamic Relationship of Exchange Rates: Parametric and Nonparametric Causality testing

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    The present study investigates the long-term linear and nonlinear causal linkages among six currencies, namely EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY, USD/CHF, AUD/USD and USD/CAD. The prime motivation for choosing these exchange rates comes from the fact that they are the most liquid and widely traded, covering about 90% of total FX trading worldwide. The data spans two periods (PI: 3/20/1991 \u2013 3/20/1997, PII: 3/20/2003 \u2013 3/20/2007) before and after the structural break of the Asian financial crisis, which set a platform for departure for causality testing. We apply a new nonparametric test for Granger non-causality by Diks and Panchenko (2005, 2006) as well as the conventional linear Granger test on the return time series. To ensure that any causality is strictly nonlinear in nature, we also examine the nonlinear causal relationships of pairwise VAR filtered residuals as well as in a six-variate formulation. We find remaining significant bi- and uni-directional causal nonlinear relationships in the return series. Finally, we investigate the hypothesis of nonlinear non-causality after controlling for conditional heteroskedasticity in the data using a GARCH-BEKK model. Our approach allows the entire variance-covariance structure of the currency interrelationship to be incorporated in order to explicitly capture the volatility spillover mechanism. Whilst the nonparametric test statistics are smaller in some cases, significant nonlinear causal linkages persisted even after GARCH filtering during both the pre- and post-Asian crisis period. This indicates that currency returns may exhibit asymmetries and statistically significant higher-order moments.

    The dynamic impact of uncertainty in causing and forecasting the distribution of oil returns and risk

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    The aim of this study is to analyze the relevance of recently developed news-based measures of economic policy and equity market uncertainty in causing and predicting the conditional quantiles of crude oil returns and risk. For this purpose, we studied both the causality relationships in quantiles through a non-parametric testing method and, building on a collection of quantiles forecasts, we estimated the conditional density of oil returns and volatility, the out-of-sample performance of which was evaluated by using suitable tests. A dynamic analysis shows that the uncertainty indexes are not always relevant in causing and forecasting oil movements. Nevertheless, the informative content of the uncertainty indexes turns out to be relevant during periods of market distress, when the role of oil risk is the predominant interest, with heterogeneous effects over the different quantiles levels.http://www.elsevier.com/locate/physa2019-10-01hj2018Economic
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