There's More to Volatility than Volume
Preprint
- 29 September 2005
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
It is widely believed that fluctuations in transaction volume, as reflected in the number of transactions and to a lesser extent their size, are the main cause of clustered volatility. Under this view bursts of rapid or slow price diffusion reflect bursts of frequent or less frequent trading, which cause both clustered volatility and heavy tails in price returns. We investigate this hypothesis using tick by tick data from the New York and London Stock Exchanges and show that only a small fraction of volatility fluctuations are explained in this manner. Clustered volatility is still very strong even if price changes are recorded on intervals in which the total transaction volume or number of transactions is held constant. In addition the distribution of price returns conditioned on volume or transaction frequency being held constant is similar to that in real time, making it clear that neither of these are the principal cause of heavy tails in price returns. We analyze recent results of Ane and Geman (2000) and Gabaix et al. (2003), and discuss the reasons why their conclusions differ from ours. Based on a cross-sectional analysis we show that the long-memory of volatility is dominated by factors other than transaction frequency or total trading volume.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fluctuations and response in financial markets: the subtle nature of ‘random’ price changesQuantitative Finance, 2004
- Financial products and financial marketsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2003
- Modeling and Forecasting Realized VolatilityEconometrica, 2003
- The Distribution of Realized Exchange Rate VolatilityJournal of the American Statistical Association, 2001
- Order Flow, Transaction Clock, and Normality of Asset ReturnsThe Journal of Finance, 2000
- Modelling Extremal EventsPublished by Springer Nature ,1997
- A long memory property of stock market returns and a new modelJournal of Empirical Finance, 1993
- Time and the Process of Security Price AdjustmentThe Journal of Finance, 1992
- Autoregressive Conditional Heteroscedasticity with Estimates of the Variance of United Kingdom InflationEconometrica, 1982
- A Subordinated Stochastic Process Model with Finite Variance for Speculative PricesEconometrica, 1973