Abstract
ABSTRACT Cryptoassets are extremely volatile with possible volatility jumps and infrastructure noise, making the estimation of true volatility process challenging. When the high-frequency data are not available, the true volatility needs to be estimated to be further studied or forecasted. The GARCH-family models have become a norm in the field. Here, we examine the performance of 6 GARCH-type specifications with 4 distributional assumptions and compare them with 4 non-parametric range-based models built on the daily ‘candles’. Our study focuses on five popular cryptocurrencies (Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB, XRP, and Dogecoin) between 1 July 2019 and 30 September 2022, utilizing Binance 5-minute data for realized measures as the high-frequency estimators of the true volatility process. The results reveal that the Garman-Klass estimator clearly outperforms the GARCH-family models in all studied settings, and the other range-based estimators remain competitive with the GARCH-family models. These results are crucial for studies on volatility in cryptoassets where using the GARCH-type models is a standard. When the high-frequency data are not available, the range-based estimators, and the Garman-Klass estimator in particular, should be preferred as proxies for the true volatility process over the GARCH-type models, be it in the in-sample, more qualitative studies, or the forecasting, out-of-sample exercises.
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