Intraday return volatility process: Evidence from NASDAQ stocks

被引:0
|
作者
Rahman S. [1 ,4 ]
Lee C.-F. [2 ]
Ang K.P. [3 ]
机构
[1] School of Business Administration, Portland State University
[2] School of Business, Rutgers University
[3] Treasury Derivatives Trading, Overseas Union Bank, Singapore
[4] School of Business Administration, Portland State University, Portland, OR 97207-0751
关键词
Assymetric; GARCH; Return volatility; Trading volume;
D O I
10.1023/A:1020683012149
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of the distributional and time-series properties of intraday returns. The purpose is to determine whether a GARCH model that allows for time varying variance in a process can adequately represent intraday return volatility. Our primary data set consists of 5-minute returns, trading volumes, and bid-ask spreads during the period January 1, 1999 through March 31, 1999, for a subset of thirty stocks from the NASDAQ 100 Index. Our results indicate that the GARCH(1,1) model best describes the volatility of intraday returns. Current volatility can be explained by past volatility that tends to persist over time. These results are consistent with those of Akgiray (1989) who estimates volatility using the various ARCH and GARCH specifications and finds the GARCH(1,1) model performs the best. We add volume as an additional explanatory variable in the GARCH model to examine if volume can capture the GARCH effects. Consistent with results of Najand and Yung (1991) and Foster (1995) and contrary to those of Lamoureux and Lastrapes (1990), our results show that the persistence in volatility remains in intraday return series even after volume is included in the model as an explanatory variable. We then substitute bid-ask spread for volume in the conditional volatility equation to examine if the latter can capture the GARCH effects. The results show that the GARCH effects remain strongly significant for many of the securities after the introduction of bid-ask spread. Consistent with results of Antoniou, Homes and Priestley (1998), intraday returns also exhibit significant asymmetric responses of volatility to flow of information into the market. © 2002 Kluwer Academic Publishers.
引用
收藏
页码:155 / 180
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Intraday return and volatility spillover mechanism from Chinese to Japanese stock market
    Nishimura, Yusaku
    Tsutsui, Yoshiro
    Hirayama, Kenjiro
    JOURNAL OF THE JAPANESE AND INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIES, 2015, 35 : 23 - 42
  • [12] Short selling and intraday volatility: evidence from the Chinese market
    Zhang, Yongjie
    Liu, Keming
    Shen, Dehua
    Zhang, Wei
    SPRINGERPLUS, 2015, 4 : 1 - 9
  • [13] CHARACTERISTICS OF THE RETURN VOLATILITY OF THE STOCKS TRADED AT THE BUCHAREST STOCK EXCHANGE IN COMPARISON WITH THE RETURN VOLATILITY OF THE STOCKS TRADED IN THE EURO AREA
    Chirila, Viorica
    Chirila, Ciprian
    Pintilescu, Carmen
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 4TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BUSINESS EXCELLENCE, VOL 1, 2009, : 79 - 82
  • [14] Intraday volatility forecasting from implied volatility
    Byun, Suk Joon
    Rhee, Dong Woo
    Kim, Sol
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANAGERIAL FINANCE, 2011, 7 (01) : 83 - +
  • [15] News and return volatility of Chinese bank stocks
    Ho, Kin-Yip
    Shi, Yanlin
    Zhang, Zhaoyong
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF ECONOMICS & FINANCE, 2020, 69 : 1095 - 1105
  • [16] Market instability and technical trading at high frequency: Evidence from NASDAQ stocks
    Erdemlioglu, Deniz
    Petitjean, Mikael
    Vargas, Nicolas
    ECONOMIC MODELLING, 2021, 102
  • [17] Scaling and memory of intraday volatility return intervals in stock markets
    Wang, FZ
    Yamasaki, K
    Havlin, S
    Stanley, HE
    PHYSICAL REVIEW E, 2006, 73 (02):
  • [18] Intraday momentum and stock return predictability: Evidence from China
    Zhang, Yaojie
    Ma, Feng
    Zhu, Bo
    ECONOMIC MODELLING, 2019, 76 : 319 - 329
  • [19] A Filtering Process to Remove the Stochastic Component from Intraday Seasonal Volatility
    Cho, Jang Hyung
    Daigler, Robert T.
    JOURNAL OF FUTURES MARKETS, 2014, 34 (05) : 479 - 495
  • [20] Interday and intraday volatility: Additional evidence from the Shanghai stock exchange
    Tian G.G.
    Guo M.
    Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting, 2007, 28 (3) : 287 - 306