Testing popular VaR models in EU new member and candidate states

The impact of allowing banks to calculate their capital requirement based on their internal VaR models, and the impact of regulation changes on banks in transitional countries has not been well studied. This paper examines whether VaR models that are created and suited for developed markets apply to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Saša Žiković
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Faculty of Economics University of Rijeka 2007-12-01
Series:Zbornik radova Ekonomskog fakulteta u Rijeci : časopis za ekonomsku teoriju i praksu
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.efri.hr/sites/efri.hr/files/cr-collections/2/07_zikovic.pdf
id doaj-f4e1dfff62b747f9a69328eb0a1ac8b6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f4e1dfff62b747f9a69328eb0a1ac8b62020-11-25T02:19:29ZdeuFaculty of Economics University of RijekaZbornik radova Ekonomskog fakulteta u Rijeci : časopis za ekonomsku teoriju i praksu1331-80042007-12-01252325346Testing popular VaR models in EU new member and candidate statesSaša ŽikovićThe impact of allowing banks to calculate their capital requirement based on their internal VaR models, and the impact of regulation changes on banks in transitional countries has not been well studied. This paper examines whether VaR models that are created and suited for developed markets apply to the volatile stock markets of EU new member and candidate states (Bulgaria, Romania, Croatia and Turkey). Nine popular VaR models are tested on five stock indexes from EU new member and candidate states. Backtesting results show that VaR models commonly used in developed stock markets are not well suited for measuring market risk in these markets. Presented findings bear very important implications that have to be addressed by regulators and risk practitioners operating in EU new member andcandidate states. Risk managers have to start thinking outside the frames set by their parent companies or else investors present in these markets may find themselves in serious trouble, dealing with losses that they have not been expecting. National regulators have to take into consideration that simplistic VaR models that are widely used in some developed countries are not well suited for these illiquid and developing stock markets.https://www.efri.hr/sites/efri.hr/files/cr-collections/2/07_zikovic.pdfEU new member and candidate statesStock indexesRisk managementMarket riskGARCH
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saša Žiković
spellingShingle Saša Žiković
Testing popular VaR models in EU new member and candidate states
Zbornik radova Ekonomskog fakulteta u Rijeci : časopis za ekonomsku teoriju i praksu
EU new member and candidate states
Stock indexes
Risk management
Market risk
GARCH
author_facet Saša Žiković
author_sort Saša Žiković
title Testing popular VaR models in EU new member and candidate states
title_short Testing popular VaR models in EU new member and candidate states
title_full Testing popular VaR models in EU new member and candidate states
title_fullStr Testing popular VaR models in EU new member and candidate states
title_full_unstemmed Testing popular VaR models in EU new member and candidate states
title_sort testing popular var models in eu new member and candidate states
publisher Faculty of Economics University of Rijeka
series Zbornik radova Ekonomskog fakulteta u Rijeci : časopis za ekonomsku teoriju i praksu
issn 1331-8004
publishDate 2007-12-01
description The impact of allowing banks to calculate their capital requirement based on their internal VaR models, and the impact of regulation changes on banks in transitional countries has not been well studied. This paper examines whether VaR models that are created and suited for developed markets apply to the volatile stock markets of EU new member and candidate states (Bulgaria, Romania, Croatia and Turkey). Nine popular VaR models are tested on five stock indexes from EU new member and candidate states. Backtesting results show that VaR models commonly used in developed stock markets are not well suited for measuring market risk in these markets. Presented findings bear very important implications that have to be addressed by regulators and risk practitioners operating in EU new member andcandidate states. Risk managers have to start thinking outside the frames set by their parent companies or else investors present in these markets may find themselves in serious trouble, dealing with losses that they have not been expecting. National regulators have to take into consideration that simplistic VaR models that are widely used in some developed countries are not well suited for these illiquid and developing stock markets.
topic EU new member and candidate states
Stock indexes
Risk management
Market risk
GARCH
url https://www.efri.hr/sites/efri.hr/files/cr-collections/2/07_zikovic.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT sasazikovic testingpopularvarmodelsineunewmemberandcandidatestates
_version_ 1724876553525919744