Abstract
Present study investigates the price discovery and hedging efficiency of NIFTY and all those stock futures whose trading started on 9th November 2001 and are continuously traded till 30th June 2006. The study observes information asymmetry in both futures and cash market and significant Jarque-Bera test rejects the hypothesis that returns in both markets follow normal distribution. Both futures and cash market returns are found to be integrated of order 1, which implies that strong long-run relationship exists between two markets and these results are strongly supported by predictable and stationary basis. Presence of information asymmetry and cointegration implies that both markets are inefficient in weak form. Moreover, Granger causality and Vector Autoregression (VAR) results provides significant evidence that futures market leads cash market, which implies that futures market is an efficient price discovery vehicle. On the basis of price discovery efficiency of the futures market, hedge ratio through EGARCH (1,1) and VAR (based on Error correction Methodology) have been estimated, which suggests that efficient price discovery of futures market provides good opportunities for the traders to hedge their market risk because hedging through futures (except for RELIANCE) help the traders to reduce portfolio variance by approximately 90% and even more in some cases.
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