random level shifts
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Author(s):  
David Adugh Kuhe ◽  
Moses Abanyam Chiawa ◽  
Sylvester Chigozie Nwaosu ◽  
Jonathan Atsua Ikughur

This study investigated the impact of volatility shock persistence on the conditional variance in the Nigerian stock returns using symmetric and asymmetric higher order GARCH family models in the presence of random level shifts and non-Gaussian errors. The study utilised Bai and Perron methodology to detect structural breakpoints in the conditional variance of daily stock and volume of trade returns in the Nigerian stock market from 2nd January, 1998 to 22nd March, 2017. The study employed symmetric GARCH (3,2) and GARCH (2,1)-M models to estimate volatility of asset returns, symmetric GARCH (2,2) and GARCH (2,1)-M to model volatility of volume of trade returns and asymmetric EGARCH (2,2), TGARCH (3,2) and PGARCH (2,3) models to measure the volatility of asset returns as well as asymmetric EGARCH (2,1), TGARCH (1,3) and PGARCH (3,2) models to estimate volatility of volume of trade returns. These models were optimally selected using information criteria and log likelihood as the best fitting symmetric and asymmetric GARCH models to estimate the conditional volatility of asset and volume of trade returns in the Nigerian stock market with and without structural breaks. Results revealed that when random level shifts were ignored in volatility models, the shocks persistence were very high with long memory and variance explosion. But when the random level shifts were incorporated into the GARCH models, there was a significant reduction in the volatility shocks persistence and long memory. Moreover, volatility half-lives also declined drastically while accounting for these sudden level shifts in variance. The study found asymmetry without leverage effects as well as a positive risk-return tradeoff for both asset and volume of trade returns in the Nigerian stock market. The Nigeria banking reform of 2004, the Global Financial and Economic Crises, as well as other local events in Nigeria, were found to have negative and significant impacts on the Nigerian stock market. The study provided some policy recommendations.


2016 ◽  
Vol 49 (26) ◽  
pp. 2579-2589 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ye Li ◽  
Pierre Perron ◽  
Jiawen Xu

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