SPATIAL DEPENDENCE AND AGGREGATION IN WEATHER RISK HEDGING: A LÉVY SUBORDINATED HIERARCHICAL ARCHIMEDEAN COPULAS (LSHAC) APPROACH

2018 ◽  
Vol 48 (02) ◽  
pp. 779-815 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenjun Zhu ◽  
Ken Seng Tan ◽  
Lysa Porth ◽  
Chou-Wen Wang

AbstractAdverse weather-related risk is a main source of crop production loss and a big concern for agricultural insurers and reinsurers. In response, weather risk hedging may be valuable, however, due to basis risk it has been largely unsuccessful to date. This research proposes the Lévy subordinated hierarchical Archimedean copula model in modelling the spatial dependence of weather risk to reduce basis risk. The analysis shows that the Lévy subordinated hierarchical Archimedean copula model can improve the hedging performance through more accurate modelling of the dependence structure of weather risks and is more efficient in hedging extreme downside weather risk, compared to the benchmark copula models. Further, the results reveal that more effective hedging may be achieved as the spatial aggregation level increases. This research demonstrates that hedging weather risk is an important risk management method, and the approach outlined in this paper may be useful to insurers and reinsurers in the case of agriculture, as well as for other related risks in the property and casualty sector.

2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 409-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tobias Dalhaus ◽  
Robert Finger

Abstract Adverse weather events occurring at sensitive stages of plant growth can cause substantial yield losses in crop production. Agricultural insurance schemes can help farmers to protect their income against downside risks. While traditional indemnity-based insurance schemes need governmental support to overcome market failure caused by asymmetric information problems, weather index–based insurance (WII) products represent a promising alternative. In WII the payout depends on a weather index serving as a proxy for yield losses. However, the nonperfect correlation of yield losses and the underlying index, the so-called basis risk, constitutes a key challenge for these products. This study aims to contribute to the reduction of basis risk and thus to the addition of risk-reducing properties of WII. More specifically, the study tests whether grid data for precipitation (vs weather station data) and phenological observations (vs fixed time windows for index determination) that are provided by public institutions can reduce spatial and temporal basis risk and thus improve the performance of WII. An empirical example of wheat production in Germany is used. No differences were found between using gridded and weather station precipitation, whereas the use of phenological observations significantly increases expected utility. However, even if grid data do not yet reduce basis risk, they enable overcoming several disadvantages of using station data and are thus useful for WII applications. Based on the study’s findings and the availability of these data in other countries, a massive potential for improving WII can be concluded.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 493-516 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hemant Kumar Badaye ◽  
Jason Narsoo

Purpose This study aims to use a novel methodology to investigate the performance of several multivariate value at risk (VaR) and expected shortfall (ES) models implemented to assess the risk of an equally weighted portfolio consisting of high-frequency (1-min) observations for five foreign currencies, namely, EUR/USD, GBP/USD, EUR/JPY, USD/JPY and GBP/JPY. Design/methodology/approach By applying the multiplicative component generalised autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (MC-GARCH) model on each return series and by modelling the dependence structure using copulas, the 95 per cent intraday portfolio VaR and ES are forecasted for an out-of-sample set using Monte Carlo simulation. Findings In terms of VaR forecasting performance, the backtesting results indicated that four out of the five models implemented could not be rejected at 5 per cent level of significance. However, when the models were further evaluated for their ES forecasting power, only the Student’s t and Clayton models could not be rejected. The fact that some ES models were rejected at 5 per cent significance level highlights the importance of selecting an appropriate copula model for the dependence structure. Originality/value To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study to use the MC-GARCH and copula models to forecast, for the next 1 min, the VaR and ES of an equally weighted portfolio of foreign currencies. It is also the first study to analyse the performance of the MC-GARCH model under seven distributional assumptions for the innovation term.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenjun Zhu ◽  
Ken Seng Tan ◽  
Lysa Porth ◽  
ChouuWen Wang

2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cigdem Topcu Guloksuz ◽  
Pranesh Kumar

AbstractIn this paper, a new generator function is proposed and based on this function a new Archimedean copula is introduced. The new Archimedean copula along with three representatives of Archimedean copula family which are Clayton, Gumbel and Frank copulas are considered as models for the dependence structure between the returns of two stocks. These copula models are used to simulate daily log-returns based on Monte Carlo (MC) method for calculating value at risk (VaR) of the financial portfolio which consists of two market indices, Ford and General Motor Company. The results are compared with the traditional MC simulation method with the bivariate normal assumption as a model of the returns. Based on the backtesting results, describing the dependence structure between the returns by the proposed Archimedean copula provides more reliable results over the considered models in calculating VaR of the studied portfolio.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Apostolos Serletis ◽  
Libo Xu

Abstract This paper examines correlation and dependence structures between money and the level of economic activity in the USA in the context of a Markov-switching copula vector error correction model. We use the error correction model to focus on the short-run dynamics between money and output while accounting for their long-run equilibrium relationship. We use the Markov regime-switching model to account for instabilities in the relationship between money and output, and also consider different copula models with different dependence structures to investigate (upper and lower) tail dependence.


2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 68-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcela de Castro Nunes Santos ◽  
José Marcio de Mello ◽  
Carlos Rogério de Mello ◽  
Léo Fernandes Ávila

The spatial characterization of soil attributes is fundamental for the understanding of forest ecosystems. The objective of this work was to develop a geostatistical study of chemical and physical soil attributes at three depths (D1 - 0-20 cm; D2 - 20-50 cm; D3 - 50-100 cm), in an Experimental Hydrographic Micro-catchment entirely covered by Atlantic Forest, in the Mantiqueira Range region, Minas Gerais. All the considered variables presented spatial dependence structure in the three depths, and the largest degrees of spatial dependence were observed for pH in the three depths, soil cation exchange capacity potential in D3, soil organic matter in D1 and D3 and clay and soil bulk density in D2. The method most used for the adjustments of semi-variogram models was the Maximum Likelihood and the most selected model was the Exponential. Furthermore, the ordinary kriging maps allowed good visualization of the spatial distribution of the variables.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-124
Author(s):  
Gabriel Gaiduchevici

AbstractThe copula-GARCH approach provides a flexible and versatile method for modeling multivariate time series. In this study we focus on describing the credit risk dependence pattern between real and financial sectors as it is described by two representative iTraxx indices. Multi-stage estimation is used for parametric ARMA-GARCH-copula models. We derive critical values for the parameter estimates using asymptotic, bootstrap and copula sampling methods. The results obtained indicate a positive symmetric dependence structure with statistically significant tail dependence coefficients. Goodness-of-Fit tests indicate which model provides the best fit to data.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Αριστείδης Νικολουλόπουλος

Studying associations among multivariate outcomes is an interesting problem in statistical science. The dependence between random variables is completely described by their multivariate distribution. When the multivariate distribution has a simple form, standard methods can be used to make inference. On the other hand one may create multivariate distributions based on particular assumptions, limiting thus their use. Unfortunately, these limitations occur very often when working with multivariate discrete distributions. Some multivariate discrete distributions used in practice can have only certain properties, as for example they allow only for positive dependence or they can have marginal distributions of a given form. To solve this problem copulas seem to be a promising solution. Copulas are a currently fashionable way to model multivariate data as they account for the dependence structure and provide a flexible representation of the multivariate distribution. Furthermore, for copulas the dependence properties can be separated from their marginal properties and multivariate models with marginal densities of arbitrary form can be constructed, allowing a wide range of possible association structures. In fact they allow for flexible dependence modelling, different from assuming simple linear correlation structures. However, in the application of copulas to discrete data marginal parameters affect dependence structure, too, and, hence the dependence properties are not fully separated from the marginal properties. Introducing covariates to describe the dependence by modelling the copula parameters is of special interest in this thesis. Thus, covariate information can describe the dependence either indirectly through the marginalparameters or directly through the parameters of the copula . We examine the case when the covariates are used both in marginal and/or copula parameters aiming at creating a highly flexible model producing very elegant dependence structures. Furthermore, the literature contains many theoretical results and families of copulas with several properties but there are few papers that compare the copula families and discuss model selection issues among candidate copula models rendering the question of which copulas are appropriate and whether we are able, from real data, to select the true copula that generated the data, among a series of candidates with, perhaps, very similar dependence properties. We examined a large set of candidate copula families taking intoaccount properties like concordance and tail dependence. The comparison is made theoretically using Kullback-Leibler distances between them. We have selected this distance because it has a nice relationship with log-likelihood and thus it can provide interesting insight on the likelihood based procedures used in practice. Furthermore a goodness of fit test based on Mahalanobisdistance, which is computed through parametric bootstrap, will be provided. Moreover we adopt a model averaging approach on copula modelling, based on the non-parametric bootstrap. Our intention is not to underestimate variability but add some additional variability induced by model selection making the precision of the estimate unconditional on the selected model. Moreover our estimates are synthesize from several different candidate copula models and thus they can have a flexible dependence structure. Taking under consideration the extended literature of copula for multivariate continuous data we concentrated our interest on fitting copulas on multivariate discrete data. The applications of multivariate copula models for discrete data are limited. Usually we have to trade off between models with limited dependence (e.g. only positive association) and models with flexible dependence but computational intractabilities. For example, the elliptical copulas provide a wide range of flexible dependence, but do not have closed form cumulative distribution functions. Thus one needs to evaluate the multivariate copula and, hence, a multivariate integral repeatedly for a large number of times. This can be time consuming but also, because of the numerical approach used to evaluate a multivariate integral, it may produce roundoff errors. On the other hand, multivariate Archimedean copulas, partially-symmetric m-variate copulas with m − 1 dependence parameters and copulas that are mixtures of max-infinitely divisible bivariate copulas have closed form cumulative distribution functions and thus computations are easy, but allow only positive dependence among the random variables. The bridge of the two above-mentioned problems might be the definition of a copula family which has simple form for its distribution function while allowing for negative dependence among the variables. We define such a multivariate copula family exploiting the use of finite mixture of simple uncorrelated normal distributions. Since the correlation vanishes, the cumulative distribution is simply the product of univariate normal cumulative distribution functions. The mixing operation introduces dependence. Hence we obtain a kind of flexible dependence, and allow for negative dependence.


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