Risk Measurement of Chinese Stock Market Based on GARCH Model and Extreme Value Theory

Abstract

The risk of the stock market has always been a hot issue for investors. This paper selects the daily closing price data of the Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 Index of the Shanghai stock exchange, the Shenzhen 300 Index of Shenzhen stock exchange, the Hang Seng Index of the Hong Kong stock exchange market and Taiwan Weighted Index of the Taiwan stock market and calculates logarithm and difference. The GARCH model is combined with the POT model of extreme value theory to measure the risk. Comparing the failure rates at the three significance levels of 0.05, 0.025 and 0.01, the failure rates are close to the level of significance, which conduct that the GARCH-POT model can measure the risk of Chinese stock market well.

Share and Cite:

Du, S. , Tang, G. and Li, S. (2019) Risk Measurement of Chinese Stock Market Based on GARCH Model and Extreme Value Theory. Open Journal of Business and Management, 7, 963-975. doi: 10.4236/ojbm.2019.72065.

1. Introduction

The risk of the stock market has been always widely concerned by researchers and investors. In the past three decades, financial market volatility has become obvious because of economic globalization and financial innovation, which makes financial risk management a necessary tool and capability for business enterprises and financial institutions to operate and manage. Value at Risk (VaR) is a widely used method of measuring financial risk. Domestic and foreign scholars have made fruitful research on the risk measurement of the stock market.

Domestic and foreign scholars have done a lot of research on the measurement of risk value. The most traditional VaR model is based on the premise that the hypothesis rate of return follows the normal distribution, while the financial time series often has volatility clustering and non-normality [1]. In order to better solve the non-normality and volatility aggregation of financial time series, Engle (1982) first proposed an autoregressive conditional heteroskedastic (ARCH) model, which is considered to be a function of past error. The ARCH model is a good indicator of the fluctuating agglomeration of financial markets [2]. On the basis of the ARCH model, Bollerslev (1986) extended it to the generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH) model, and considered that the conditional variance is not only a function of the past error, but also a function of the conditional variance of the lag. The GARCH model not only reveals the “fluctuating agglomeration” characteristics of financial markets, but also reflects the “thick tail” characteristics. Therefore, the GARCH model can be used to characterize financial time series that are thicker than the tail of a normal distribution [3]. Later, in order to reveal the asymmetry and leverage effect of financial data, Nelson (1991) proposed an index GARCH (EGARCH) model, which introduces parameters γ in the conditional variance equation to distinguish between positive and negative external impacts on the price of financial products. Since then, the GARCH family model has continued to grow and develop, such as: TGARCH model, IGARCH model, GJRGARCH model [4]. Gong Rui (2005) compared the GARCH model, EGARCH model and PARCH model of the Shanghai Composite Index, Shanghai Stock Exchange 180 Index and Shenzhen Composite Index under the normal distribution, t distribution and GED distribution, and calculated the corresponding VaR values. It is considered that the VaR value under the t distribution is too conservative, and the GED distribution is more accurate to describe the characteristics of the yield [5]. Dong ran (2016) measured the risks in the national debt market, believed that the Shanghai municipal government bond index had leverage effect, and suggested investors to accurately judge the market information before investing [6].

Extreme events are small probability events, once happen these small probability events can cause huge losses. Extreme Value Theory (EVT) is a theory for modeling and analyzing tail data. It is widely used in many fields such as technology engineering, environment, and geological disasters. The two models commonly used in extreme value theory are BMM model and POT model. The BMM model first divides the financial time series into several sub-intervals according to a certain standard, models the maximum (minimum) value of each set of data, and obtains the parameter estimation according to the maximum likelihood estimation or other estimation methods. However, the traditional BMM model relies on the choice of the length of the subinterval, and it is easy to ignore some valuable data. At present, the most widely used is the POT model, which can make full use of limited observations. The POT model models all observations that exceed a given threshold, which approximates the Generalized Pareto Distribution. There are many methods for selecting the threshold, such as Hill estimation method, kurtosis method, and over-expectation function graph method. These methods have their own advantages and disadvantages, and there is no unified selection standard. Mcneil (2000) combined the GARCH family model with extreme value theory for the first time and constructed the GARCH-EVT model to predict the VaR of financial products [7]. Tang Yong (2012) used the kernel fitting goodness statistical method and the average excess distribution function graph to select the threshold respectively, and fitted the POT model to the low-frequency data and high-frequency data distribution, and considered that the kernel fitting goodness statistical method was more effective to select the threshold comparison [8]. Zhang Hu (2016) used the extreme value theory to study the risk value of the return rate of stock market [9]. Wang Miao (2017) used extreme value theory to study the fluctuation of the Shanghai stock market and the conditional risk value (CVaR) of the characteristic of thick tail [10].

With the integration of international finance, every stock market is not an independent entity. Due to the increasing economic ties around the world, the stock market in Hong Kong and Taiwan have a longer history than the mainland. At present, there are relatively few literatures on the risk measurement of these four stock markets in China. This paper selects the daily closing price data of Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 Index of Shanghai stock exchange, the Shenzhen 300 Index of Shenzhen stock exchange, the Hang Seng Index of Hong Kong stock exchange market and the Taiwan Weighted Index of Taiwan stock exchange market, and combines the GARCH model with the POT model of extreme value theory to measure risk.

2. Empirical Methodology

2.1. VaR

Value at Risk (VaR) is the maximum possible loss of a particular financial asset for a given period of time m at a certain level of confidence 1 p . Define it as follow:

V a R 1 p = inf { x | F m ( x ) 1 p } (1)

where the inf indicates the minimum value that satisfies the real number x in the condition. As you can see from the definition, F m ( V a R 1 p ) 1 p , that is:

Pr [ L t ( m ) V a R 1 p ] 1 p (2)

where L t ( m ) represents the loss random variable of the position of the financial asset. Therefore, from time t to time t + m , the probability that the potential loss of the gold financial position holder is less than or equal to V a R 1 p is 1 p .

2.2. GARCH Model

Common one-dimensional volatility models include ARCH models, GARCH models, and EGARCH models. In general, the return on financial assets has the characteristics of “volatility aggregation”, that is, the volatility is high in a certain period of time, and the volatility is small in other time periods. (p, q) in the GARCH (p, q) model represents the ARCH coefficient p and the GARCH term coefficient q. The model consists of two equations: one is the conditional mean equation and the other is the conditional variance equation. For logarithmic rate of return r t , Define a t = r t μ t as the disturbance or new interest at time t. We call a t GARCH(p,q) model if a t satisfies the following formula:

{ r t = μ t + a t a t = σ t ε t σ t = α 0 + i = 1 p α i a t i 2 + j = 1 q β j σ t j 2 (3)

where { ε t } is independent and identically distributed random variable sequence with mean 0 and variance of 1. α 0 > 0 , α i > 0 , β j 0 , i = 1 max ( p , q ) ( α i + β i ) < 1 . For i > p , it must be α i = 0 ; for j > q , it must be β j = 0 . The last constraint for α i + β i guarantees that the unconditional variance of a t is limited. At the same time, its conditional variance σ t 2 is time-varying. This article uses a low-order GARCH (1, 1) model:

{ r t = μ t + a t a t = σ t ε t σ t = α 0 + α 1 a t 1 2 + β 1 σ t 1 2 (4)

2.3. POT Model

The full name of the POT model is the peak beyond the threshold, independent of the choice of the length of the subinterval, but requires a threshold. For a fixed shape parameter ξ , the mean excess function is a linear function of u u 0 . Define the empirical mean excess function as:

e T ( u ) = 1 N u i = 1 N u ( x t i u ) (5)

where N u is the number of exceeding the threshold u, named the excess; x t i is the value corresponding to the rate of return. The criterion for selecting a threshold by exceeding the excess function is that selecting a threshold that is large enough, and the mean excess plot after the threshold is approximately linear. Suppose the log-return is r 1 , r 2 , , r n , the distribution function is F ( r ) , x i = r i u is the number of excess. The distribution function of the excess is expressed as:

F u ( x ) = Pr ( r u | r > u ) = F ( x + u ) F ( u ) 1 F ( u ) , x 0 (6)

Transform Equation (6) to get:

F ( r ) = F ( x + u ) = [ 1 F ( u ) ] F u ( x ) + F ( u ) , r > u (7)

For a sufficiently large threshold u, F u ( x ) can be approximately expressed as Generalized Pareto Distribution (GPD). GPD distribution includes shape parameters ξ and scale parameters β . GPD distribution G ( x ; ξ , β ) can be described as:

G ( x ; ξ , β ) = { 1 ( 1 + ξ x / β ) 1 / ξ ξ 0 1 exp ( x / β ) ξ = 0 (8)

For the distribution function F ( r ) , it can be approximately expressed as empirical estimate ( n N u ) / n . Then you can get the distribution function of the actual sample as follows:

F ( r ) = 1 N u n [ 1 + ξ β ( r u ) ] 1 ξ , r > u (9)

3. Empirical Study

3.1. Data Description

This paper selects the daily closing price data of the Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 Index of the Shanghai stock exchange, the Shenzhen 300 Index of Shenzhen stock exchange, the Hang Seng Index of the Hong Kong stock exchange market and Taiwan Weighted Index of the Taiwan stock market. The time period is from March 7th, 2014 to March 7, 2019. The trading hours of stock markets in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan are not completely consistent. In order to maintain the consistency of data, the data processing method of Pei Yanhua et al. [11] (2017) is adopted to eliminate data with inconsistent transaction dates to get 1158 data. The logarithm and a difference operation of the daily closing price sequence is performed to obtain a daily logarithmic rate of return sequence, for a total of 1157 data. The article data comes from the CSMAR database, and the analysis of this article is implemented by R software.

It can be seen from Table 1 that the daily logarithmic yield series of the Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 Index, the Shenzhen 300 Index, the Hang Seng Index and the Taiwan Weighted Index are all left-biased as the skewness is less than 0, and the kurtosis is significantly greater than 3, both with sharp peaks and thick tails feature. The J-B statistic rejects the null hypothesis of the normal distribution. It can also be seen from Figure 1 that the four indices are not obey to normal distribution as the scatter is away from the line. Both the ADF test and the P-P test passed, indicating that the yields of the four indices were stable. The volatility clustering feature refers to the fact that the volatility is high in a specific period of time while it is low in other periods. It can be seen from the daily logarithmic rate of return timing chart in Figure 2 that all four index yields exhibit volatility aggregation characteristics. The ARCH effect test is performed on the four yield series, and the results show that the rate of return series has conditional heteroscedasticity.

3.2. GARCH Model Establishment

According to the above analysis, the Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 Index, the Shenzhen 300 Index, the Hang Seng Index and the Taiwan Weighted Index are

Table 1. Descriptive statistics of log-returns.

Figure 1. QQ plot of daily log-returns.

Figure 2. Time series of daily log-returns.

all stationary sequences, and all have an ARCH effect. The GARCH model not only reveals the “fluctuating aggregation” of financial markets, but also reveals the “thick tail” feature. According to previous scholars' research, the low-order GARCH (1, 1) model can well describe the characteristics of financial time series. Therefore, this paper establishes a low-order GARCH (1, 1) model for the Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 Index, the Shenzhen 300 Index, the Hang Seng Index and the Taiwan Weighted Index.

Table 2 is the parameter estimation results of the GARCH (1, 1) model, except for the constant term, all the parameters pass the significance test. Among them, the ARCH parameter α and the GARCH parameter β are both greater than zero, which guarantees the positive definiteness of the conditional variance, and also indicates that fluctuations of the stock market are characterized by agglomeration. The historical fluctuations are positively correlated with the current fluctuations and the speed is gradually slowed down. The large fluctuations often follow with large fluctuations, investors are more speculative in the stock market. α + β < 1 ensure that the model is a smooth GARCH model.

A white noise test is performed on the standardized residual of the model, and the test statistic is the LB statistic. The results are shown in Table 3. Under the 6th and 12th order lags, the P value of the LB statistic is significantly greater than 0.05. It can be considered that the residual of the model belongs to the white noise sequence, that is, the model can well characterize the log yield series.

3.3. POT Model Establishment

An estimate of the standard deviation can be obtained from the above GARCH (1, 1) model. Since the GARCH (1, 1) model measures the risks in the normal market, in reality, there are often a few extreme values that can cause huge losses. Therefore, here we establish a GARCH (1, 1)-POT model for the normalized residual of the GARCH (1, 1) model, that is, model the super-threshold data exceeding the threshold u. The most important thing to establish a POT model is the choice of threshold. If the threshold is too large, the sample data exceeding

Table 2. Parameter estimation of GARCH (1, 1) model.

Table 3. White noise test of residual.

the threshold will be too small, which may increase the variance of the parameter estimation. If the threshold is too small, the excess cannot be guaranteed to obey the generalized pareto distribution, which may result in biased parameter estimates. The method of selecting the threshold generally adopts the method of transcending the expectation function, and the selected threshold which value exceeds the threshold part to present a linear characteristic. In addition, there is the 10% principle proposed by Du Mouchel [12] : when the threshold u is allowed, about 10% of the data is selected as the extreme value data to be studied.

According to the graph of the transcendental expectation function of Figure 3, based on the 10% principle proposed by Du Mouchel, it can be seen that the mean excess plot shows a linear trend after 1.1 or 1.2. Therefore, the thresholds are selected to be 1.2, 1.2, 1.2 and 1.1 respectively. The generalized Pareto distribution (GPD) is fitted to the data exceeding the threshold, and the estimation results of the shape parameters and the scale parameters are shown in Table 4.

In order to test the fitting effect of the model, the diagnostic test charts of the GARCH (1, 1)-POT models of the standardized residuals of the four index yield series are shown in Figures 4-7 respectively. The upper left corner is the distribution function graph of the overrun, the upper right corner is the distribution tail probability estimation graph, the lower left corner is the residual scatter plot, and the lower right corner is the residual QQ plot. The closer the scatter and the line are, the better the model fits. It can be seen from the four graphs that most of the scatter points are on or near the line, and very few points have slight deviations

Figure 3. Mean excess plot.

Table 4. Model parameter estimation of GARCH (1,1)-POT model.

Figure 4. Model diagnostic test chart of HS300.

Figure 5. Model diagnostic test chart of SZ300.

Figure 6. Model diagnostic test chart of HIS.

from the line, indicating that the effect of model is intended to be not bad, which also means that the threshold is reasonable.

3.4. VaR Calculation and Failure Rate Test

The VaR calculation is performed on the indices of the four stock markets. Figure 8 is a comparison between the index yields of the four stock markets and the VaR at the 0.05, 0.025, and 0.01 significance levels, showing the time-varying characteristics of the fluctuations. In particular, when the market rises or falls, the model will change the estimatimation of the next VaR at any time, reflecting the changes in the market in a timely manner. On the whole, most of the VaR values can fluctuate with fluctuations of the yield, and with the confidence level increases (that is, the level of significance decreases), the change is more close to the fluctuation of the yield. The part of the rate of return that fluctuates beyond VaR is a failure event. As the level of confidence increases, the number of failures decreases significantly.

The failure rate test is proposed by Kupiec [13]. The basic idea is to use the

Figure 7. Model diagnostic test chart of TWII.

Figure 8. Comparison chart between yield and VaR.

model to calculate the predicted loss value and compare it with the actual loss value. When VaR is lower than the actual loss, it is recorded as a failure event. A successful event is recorded when VaR exceeds the actual loss. The actual failure rate is equal to the number of failure days N divided by the total number of observations T, and the actual failure rate is compared with the significance level at which a given VaR estimate is achieved. The closer it is, the better the effect. The null hypothesis of the model is: H 0 : N / T = p , where p is significant level. When the actual failure rate is less than a given level of significance, the risk is overestimated, and conversely, when the actual failure rate is greater than a given level of significance, the risk is underestimated.

If the actual failure rate is expressed as: L = N T × 100 % ,

When N T < p , the fitting success rate is: S = L p × 100 % = N T p × 100 % ;

When N T > p , the fitting success rate is: S = p L × 100 % = p T N × 100 % .

All in all, the fit success rate represents the ratio of the failure rate to the significance level of VaR. The significance level here is 0.05, 0.025 and 0.01, and Table 5 shows the results of the failure rate test.

From the results of the above failure rate test, the indices of the four stock markets have different degrees of overestimation and underestimation of risks. For the Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 Index, the risk is overestimated at a significance level of 0.05, while the risk is underestimated at a significant level of 0.025 and 0.01; for the Shenzhen 300, the risk is underestimated at a significant level of 0.05 and 0.025, while the risk is overestimated at a significance level of 0.01; for the Hang Seng Index, the risk is underestimated at a significance level of 0.05, while the risk is overestimated at a significant level of 0.025 and 0.01; for

Table 5. Failure rate test results.

a Taiwan Weighted Index, the risk is overestimated at a significant level of 0.05 and0.025, while the risk is underestimate at a significance level of 0.05. Among them, the Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 index has the highest success rate of the model under the significance level of 0.025 and the Hong Kong Hang Seng Index at the significance level of 0.05, and the Hang Seng Index has the lowest success rate at the significance level of 0.01. Overall, the model has a high success rate, which indicates that the combination of GARCH model and extreme value theory can measure the risk of Chinese stock market.

4. Conclusions

This paper analyzes the Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 Index of Shanghai stock exchange, Shenzhen 300 Index of Shenzhen stock exchange, Hang Seng Index of Hong Kong stock exchange market and Taiwan Weighted Index of Taiwan stock market, and combines GARCH model and extreme value theory to calculate separately. The VaR values of the Shanghai and Shenzhen 300 Index, the Shenzhen 300 Index, the Hang Seng Index and the Taiwan Weighted Index at the 0.05, 0.025 and 0.01 significance levels were calculated, and the failure rate was calculated, too. The GARCH model mainly depicts the “volatility aggregation” feature of financial time series. The GARCH-POT model adds the extreme value theory based on the extraction of the standard residual of GARCH model, which can well describe the influence of residual fluctuation of daily yield and reflect the "thick tail" of the distribution. Through empirical research and comparative analysis, the following conclusions are drawn:

The distribution of the yield of Chinese stock market has the characteristics of peak, thick tail and volatility. It is necessary to select the appropriate volatility model to fit the financial time series. The POT model with extreme value theory is added to the GARCH model to fit the tail portion of the yield. The failure rate test results show that the effect is better. However, regarding the selection of the threshold, it is somewhat subjective to rely solely on the observation of the graph beyond the expectation function. The methods such as the kurtosis method and the Hill estimation method are the future research directions. Since each stock market is not an independent entity, it conducts risk measurement on the stock market in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, studying its risk and its volatility spillover effect is very necessary for investors to construct diversified investment portfolios and relevant intra-regional formulation of departmental policies.

The main contribution of this paper is to provide decision-making reference for financial institutions and investors, and to help prevent financial risks. Although the combination of GARCH model and extreme value theory has well characterized the financial data, the applicability of the model may not be appropriate. In the establishment of POT model, it is subjective to determine the threshold value with the combination of Du Mouchel 10% principle and the overshooting function graph. Therefore, how to choose a more appropriate model and the method to determine the threshold is still a subject that needs to be studied.

Fund

Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (61703117); National Natural Science Foundation of China (61763008); Guangxi Basic Ability Improvement Project of Young and Middle-aged Teachers (2018KY0261).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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