Understanding volatility dynamics in the EU-ETS market:lessons from the future
In this paper we study the short term price behavior of December 2008 future prices for EU emissionallowances. We model returns and volatility dynamics of this price showing that a standard ARMA-GARCHframework is not adequate and that the gaussianity assumption is rejected due to the occurrence of a numberof level and volatility outliers. To improve the fitness of the model, we combine the underlying price processwith an additive stochastic jump process. The resulting distribution, a mixture of Gaussians, allows forendogenously determined jumps in the process governing the returns, while the mixing law determines thejump probability. The performance of the model is improved by introducing a time varying jump probabilityexplained by two variables. The first one is the daily relative change in the volume of transactions andsuggests that sharp increases in volume increase volatility even in the absence of changes in what recentliterature considers as market fundamentals. The second one accounts for changes in the jump probabilityassociated to the European Commission's announcements regarding the NAPs for Phase II. We find thatannouncements concerning the NAPs induce jumps in the process and tend to increase volatility. This resultsuggests authorities should advocate to increase stability in the regulatory environment which is crucial toallow traders to realize efficient trading strategies and informed investment decisions regarding pollutionreduction.....
C16 - Specific Distributions ; C32 - Time-Series Models ; C51 - Model Construction and Estimation ; C53 - Forecasting and Other Model Applications ; Q52 - Pollution Control Costs; Distributional Effects ; Q53 - Air Pollution; Water Pollution; Noise; Hazardous Waste; Solid Waste ; Management of environmental resources ; Individual Working Papers, Preprints ; No country specification