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Do retail option traders know better about market volatility?

conference contribution
posted on 2007-01-01, 00:00 authored by C Chen, M H Liu, Hoa NguyenHoa Nguyen
This paper examines the informational content and predictive power of implied volatility over different forecasting horizons in a sample of European covered warrants traded in the Hong Kong and Singapore markets. The empirical results show that time-series-based volatility forecasts outperform implied volatility forecast as a predictor of future volatility. The finding also suggests that implied volatility is biased and informationally inefficient. The results are attributable to the fact in Hong Kong and Singapore the covered warrants markets are dominated by retail investors, who tend to use covered warrants' leverage to speculate on the price movements of the underlying rather than to express their view on volatility.

History

Event

Global Academy of Business and Economic Research. International Conference (2007 : Bangkok, Thailand)

Pagination

44 - 72

Publisher

Library of Congress

Location

Bangkok, Thailand

Place of publication

Bangkok, Thailand

Start date

2007-12-27

End date

2007-12-29

ISSN

1940-5391

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Editor/Contributor(s)

M Islam

Title of proceedings

Global Academy of Business & Economic Research Bangkok 2007 Conference Proceedings : Issues in global research in business & economics

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