Abstract

Conditional tail expectation (CTE) is a coherent risk measure defined as the mean of the loss distribution above a high quantile. The existence of the CTE as well as the asymptotic properties of associated estimators however require integrability conditions that may be violated when dealing with heavy-tailed distributions. We introduce Box–Cox transforms of the CTE that have two benefits. First, they alleviate these theoretical issues. Second, they enable to recover a number of risk measures such as conditional tail expectation, expected shortfall, conditional value-at-risk or conditional tail variance. The construction of dedicated estimators is based on the investigation of the asymptotic relationship between Box–Cox transforms of the CTE and quantiles at extreme probability levels, as well as on an extrapolation formula established in the heavy-tailed context. We quantify and estimate the bias induced by the use of these approximations and then introduce reduced-bias estimators whose asymptotic properties are rigorously shown. Their finite-sample properties are assessed on a simulation study and illustrated on real data, highlighting the practical interest of both the bias reduction and the Box–Cox transform.

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