The pricing of unexpected volatility in the currency market
Working Paper
Many recent papers have investigated the role played by volatility in determining the cross-section of currency returns. This paper employs two time-varying factor models: a threshold model and a Markov-switching model to price the excess returns from the currency carry trade. We show that the importance of volatility depends on whether the currency markets are unexpectedly volatile. Volatility innovations during relatively tranquil periods are largely unrewarded in the market, whereas during the volatile period, this risk, has a substantial impact on currency returns. The empirical results show that the two time-varying factor models fit the data better and generate a smaller pricing errors than the linear model, while the Markov-switching model outperforms the threshold factor models not only by generating lower pricing errors but also distinguishing two regimes endogenously and without any predetermined state variables.
History
Published in
The European Journal of FinancePublisher
Taylor & FrancisVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Citation
Lu, Wenna & Copeland, Laurence & Xu, Yongdeng,(2023) "The Pricing of Unexpected Volatility in the Currency Market," The European Journal of Finance. doi: 10.1080/1351847X.2023.2190464Print ISSN
1351-847XElectronic ISSN
1466-4364Cardiff Met Affiliation
- Cardiff School of Management
Cardiff Met Authors
Wenna LuCardiff Met Research Centre/Group
- Welsh Centre for Business and Management Research
Copyright Holder
- © The Publisher
Language
- en