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2022 | Book

Excess Volatility in the Term Structure of Interest Rates, in Share Prices and in Eurozone Derivatives

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About this book

The phenomenon of excess volatility in the context of share prices and of the term structure of interest rates has been documented by the existing literature, highlighting the limitations of traditional models of rational expectations and of reliance on the efficient market hypothesis. The data violates the bounds on volatility that are derived from them. Amia Santini studies the possible shortcomings of the methodologies used to uncover those inconsistencies, and the potential explanations of the observed phenomenon that can be considered in line with the rational expectation framework. She focuses on a relatively newer field of study: derivative instruments. Previous results of excess volatility, recovered with a worldwide focus, are presented and an empirical analysis is performed to assess whether a similar outcome would be obtained in the Eurozone market. The exploration of financial information that falls underneath the risk-neutral measure, such as derivative prices, reduces the importance of time-varying discount rates as a potential explanation of excess volatility. In fact, the martingale measure already incorporates all potential variation in risk premia, which is the main driver of changes in discount rates. This opens the door to different and innovative prospects, and specific attention is paid to a new model for investor behaviour, that of natural expectations.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Abstract
Abstract
The following master thesis aims to document and study the phenomenon of excess volatility in the context of share prices, of the term structure of interest rates and of derivative instruments. The existing literature surrounding the analysis of the first two is presented with no empirical extension, but simply to provide an encompassing view of the results obtained thus far. The limitations of traditional models of rational expectations and of the reliance on the efficient market hypothesis are shown, as the data violates the bounds on volatility that are derived from them. Next, the focus is shifted to a relatively newer field of study: derivative instruments. Previous results of excess volatility, recovered with a worldwide focus, are presented and an empirical analysis is performed to assess whether a similar outcome would be obtained in the Eurozone market.
Amia Santini
Chapter 2. Introduction
Abstract
The topic of this research finds its literary starting point in Shiller (1979). Therein, following changes in short-term interest rates, the volatility in the long end of the term structure is documented to be in excess of the one allowed for by the traditional representation of long-term interest rates. In the economic literature, the analysis is afterwards extended to stock prices—with a focus on how big the changes in expected real dividend should be in order to account for the high volatility in the changes in detrended real share prices.
Amia Santini
Chapter 3. Chapter I: Literature on the Subject of Excess Volatility
Abstract
The traditional understanding of the determination of interest rates derives from macroeconomics, more specifically from the loanable funds theory. All sources of credit—from household savings to bank loans—compose demand and supply of loanable funds, which meet at the equilibrium level of interest rates in the economy. In such a setting, the main drivers of the behaviour of interest rates are expected economic growth, unexpected inflation, public deficits and public consumption.
Amia Santini
Chapter 4. Chapter II: Excess Volatility Beyond Discount Rates
Abstract
Among the alternatives to—or possible explanations in line with—the efficient-markets hypothesis mentioned above, possibly the most widely studied was the case of time-varying discount rates. The next academic paper to be the subject of this analysis is Giglio and Kelly (2017). The paper aims to study the violation of internal consistency conditions implied by standard models for the prices of financial assets of different maturities.
Amia Santini
Chapter 5. Chapter III: Evidence of Excess Volatility in the Eurozone Market
Abstract
The current chapter involves an attempt at performing the analysis of Giglio and Kelly (2017) for instruments linked to the European market and, more specifically, to the Eurozone. The first step of the analysis will revolve around variance swaps on two indices: Euro Stoxx 50 and DAX. The price data was collected from the Bloomberg terminal with the Bloomberg Data History Excel function.
Amia Santini
Chapter 6. Conclusions
Abstract
The rational expectations model is the theoretical background that acts as a basis for the findings of excess volatility of studies revolving around both share prices and interest rates. It describes prices at any point in time as reflecting all the information that is available to the public, and long-term rates as dependent on the series of all future expected one-period short-term rates conditioned on information known in a given moment. Such information includes macroeconomic factors, such as changes in the monetary base, in fiscal policy, in factor prices and in expectations about inflation.
Amia Santini
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Excess Volatility in the Term Structure of Interest Rates, in Share Prices and in Eurozone Derivatives
Author
Amia Santini
Copyright Year
2022
Electronic ISBN
978-3-658-37450-1
Print ISBN
978-3-658-37449-5
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-37450-1