We study the impact of volatility on intraday serial correlation, at time scales of less than 20 minutes, exploiting a data set with all transactions on SPX500 futures from 1993 to 2001. We show that, while realized volatility and intraday serial correlation are linked, this relation is driven by unexpected volatility only, that is by the fraction of volatility that cannot be forecasted by a linear model. The impact of predictable volatility is instead found to be negative (LeBaron effect). Our results are robust to microstructure noise, and they confirm the leading economic theories on price formation.
Bianco, S., Reno', R. (2009). Unexpected volatility and intraday serial correlation. QUANTITATIVE FINANCE, 9(4), 466-475 [10.1080/14697680802452050].
Unexpected volatility and intraday serial correlation
Reno', Roberto
2009-01-01
Abstract
We study the impact of volatility on intraday serial correlation, at time scales of less than 20 minutes, exploiting a data set with all transactions on SPX500 futures from 1993 to 2001. We show that, while realized volatility and intraday serial correlation are linked, this relation is driven by unexpected volatility only, that is by the fraction of volatility that cannot be forecasted by a linear model. The impact of predictable volatility is instead found to be negative (LeBaron effect). Our results are robust to microstructure noise, and they confirm the leading economic theories on price formation.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/11365/10832
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