Abstract

Summary The aim of this study is to analyze the tails of the distributions of stock market returns and to compare the differences between them. It is a well-established fact that the vast majority of stock market return distributions exhibit fat tails (a bigger probability of extreme outcomes then in the case of the normal probability). Apart from that, there seems to be a popular opinion that most market returns are negatively skewed with a fatter left tail. The study utilizes two methods for comparing the tails of a distribution. A simple approached based on the sample kurtosis, with a modification that allows for the calculation of kurtosis separately for the right and the left tail of a single distribution and a more complex approach based on the maximum likelihood fitting of the Generalized Pareto Distribution to both tales of standardized return distributions. The second approach is based on the assumptions of the Extreme Value Theory (EVT) and the Pickands-Balkema-de Haan theorem. Both approaches provide similar conclusions. Results suggest that whether the left or the right tail of the return distribution is bigger varies from market to market. All four major equity indices of the Polish Warsaw Stock Exchange exhibited a fatter left tale. However, in the whole sample it was actually more common for the right tail to be heavier, with 12 indices out of 20 exhibiting a fatter right tail then the left. The sample kurtosis indicated that all stock market return’s distributions were heavy tailed, whereas the estimates of Generalized Pareto Distribution parameters did indicate standard or thin tails in two cases. Statistical tests indicate that the differences between the tails of stock market distributions are not statistically significant

Highlights

  • Financial markets constitute a very important element of the developed economies and can be seen as an important source of information

  • The sample kurtosis values were calculated on the unstandardized data according to the equation (2)

  • The obtained results do not confirm the stylized fact that the left tail of the distribution of stock market returns is thicker than the right tail

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Summary

Introduction

Financial markets constitute a very important element of the developed economies and can be seen as an important source of information. The analysis of the tails of stock market return probability distributions is an important issue in the study of the microstructure of financial markets. The left tail represents the probability of an extreme loss and the right tail represents the probability of an abnormally high gain. This is not always so with more complicated investment strategies which employ short selling and/or derivative instruments. Despite that the tails of financial return distributions are a key element of the investment and market-risk analysis

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