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IAS NOBEL LECTURE
Volatility, Correlation and Tails for Systemic Risk Measurement
Prof Robert Engle, New York University; Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences
Date : 24 Jun 2011 (Friday)
Time : 4:00 - 5:30pm
Venue : Citi Lecture Theater (LT-A), HKUST

Abstract

The Great Recession of 2007/2009 has motivated market participants, academics and regulators to better understand systemic risk. Regulation is now designed to reduce systemic risk. However, it is not yet clear how to measure systemic risk and in particular to determine which firms are the major contributors to the overall risk of the economy. This lecture focuses on constructing measures of systemic risk based on public market data and consequently provides a quick and inexpensive approach to determining which firms deserve more careful scrutiny and regulation. The measure examined in this lecture is the Marginal Expected Shortfall or MES. This is the expected loss an equity investor in a financial firm would experience if the overall market declined substantially. This measure can then be extrapolated to estimate equity losses for this firm in a future crisis and consequently the capital shortage that would be experienced as a consequence of the initial leverage. The contribution to systemic risk is then estimated as the percentage of capital shortfall that can be expected in a future crisis. MES depends upon the volatility of a firm equity price, its correlation with the market return and the comovement of the tails of the distributions. These in turn are estimated by asymmetric versions of GARCH, DCC and non-parametric tail estimators. Empirical results with 102 US financial firms find predictability in both time series and cross section and useful ranking of firms at various stages of the financial crisis.

 

About the speaker

Robert Engle, the Michael Armellino Professor of Finance at New York University Stern School of Business, was awarded the 2003 Nobel Prize in Economics for his research on the concept of autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (ARCH). He developed this method for statistical modeling of time-varying volatility and demonstrated that these techniques accurately capture the properties of many time series. Prof Engle shared the prize with Clive W. J. Granger of the University of California at San Diego.

Prof Engle is an expert in time series analysis with a long-standing interest in the analysis of financial markets. His ARCH model and its generalizations have become indispensable tools not only for researchers, but also for analysts of financial markets, who use them in asset pricing and in evaluating portfolio risk. His research has also produced such innovative statistical methods as cointegration, common features, autoregressive conditional duration (ACD), CAViaR and now dynamic conditional correlation (DCC) models.

Prof Engle received his BSc in Physics from Williams College, and his MSc in Physics and PhD in Economics from Cornell University. He is currently the Director of the newly created NYU Stern Volatility Institute and is the Co-Founding President of the Society for Financial Econometrics (SoFiE), a global non-profit organization housed at New York University. Before joining NYU Stern in 2000, he was Chancellor’s Associates Professor and Economics Department Chair at the University of California, San Diego, and Associate Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

This event is co-sponsored by the School of Business and Management.

Institute for Advanced Study
Enquiries ias@ust.hk / 2358 5912
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