The predictive power of Japanese candlestick charting in Chinese stock market

2016 ◽  
Vol 457 ◽  
pp. 148-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shi Chen ◽  
Si Bao ◽  
Yu Zhou
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Kai Yan ◽  
Dehua Shen

AbstractThis paper incorporates the Baidu Index into various heterogeneous autoregressive type time series models and shows that the Baidu Index is a superior predictor of realized volatility in the SSE 50 Index. Furthermore, the predictability of the Baidu Index is found to rise as the forecasting horizon increases. We also find that continuous components enhance predictive power across all horizons, but that increases are only sustained in the short and medium terms, as the long-term impact on volatility is less persistent. Our findings should be expected to influence investors interested in constructing trading strategies based on realized volatility.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi Li ◽  
Zichuan Mi ◽  
Wenjun Jing

AbstractThis study adopts the textual network to describe the coordination among the interplay of words, where nodes represent words and nodes are connected if the corresponding words have co-occurrence pattern across documents. To study stock movements, we further proposed the sparse laplacian shrinkage logistic model (SLS_L) which can properly take into account the network connectivity structure. By using this approach, we investigated the relationship between Shenwan index and analysts' research reports. The securities analysts’ research reports are crawled by a famous financial website in China: EastMoney, and are then parsed into time-series textual data. The empirical results show that the proposed SLS_L model outperforms alternatives including Lasso-Logistics (L_L) and MCP-Logistic (MCP_L) models by having better prediction performance. Besides, we search published literature and find the identified keywords with more lucid interpretations. Our study unveils some interesting findings that the efficient use of textual network is important to improve the predictive power as well as the semantic interpretability in stock market analysis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 304-314
Author(s):  
Kuaile Shi

This paper uses high-frequency stock index data to construct realized volatilities for the Chinese stock market and applies in-sample and out-of-sample  to test the predictive power of realized volatility on Chinese stock market returns. The empirical results show that realized volatility can significantly predict the excess return of the Chinese stock market in the next month, and the in-sample and out-of-sample regression models  are positive, and the out-of-sample  The p-value of the regression model is significant. And after controlling for a range of other stock predictor variables, we find that the regression coefficient of realized volatility is still significant, and we find that after adding realized volatility, the in-sample adj-  increases with the inclusion of realized volatility, suggesting that realized volatility does have components that are not explained by other economic variables. Also based on a different construction method, the realized variance still has significant predictive power after averaging the realized variance. After combining two different realized variance indicators, the predictive power is still better. In terms of economic interpretation, this paper finds that the predictive power of realized variance on stock returns is through influencing the turnover rate (market trading activity), which in turn influences stock market returns. We find that realized volatility has a significant effect on the turnover rate, and when we use realized volatility to predict the turnover rate, which in turn predicts the excess return, we find that the coefficient is highly significant, indicating that realized volatility can indeed cause changes in excess return by affecting the turnover rate.


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