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Asset prices are stale. We define a measure of systematic (market-wide) staleness as the percentage of small price adjustments over multiple assets. A notion of idiosyncratic (asset-specific) staleness is also established. For both systematic and idiosyncratic staleness, we provide a limit...
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Vast empirical evidence points to the existence of a negative correlation, named “leverage effect”, between shocks in variance and shocks in returns. We provide a nonparametric theory of leverage estimation in the context of a continuous-time stochastic volatility model with jumps in...
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Even moderate amounts of zero returns in financial data, associated with stale prices, are heavily detrimental for reliable jump inference. We harness staleness-robust estimators to re-appraise the statistical features of jumps in financial markets. We find that jumps are much less frequent and...
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The simultaneous occurrence of jumps in several stocks can be associated with major financial news, triggers short-term predictability in stock returns, is correlated with sudden spikes of the variance risk premium, and determines a persistent increase (decrease) of stock variances and...
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