Abstract
This study discusses how to compute and forecast long-term stock return volatilities, typically with a five-year horizon or longer, using credit derivatives, and how such volatilities can be used in different areas ranging from the valuation of employee stock options and other long-term derivatives to the construction of market-based fear gauges in selected countries or market segments. In the empirical part of the paper I focus on the European financial sector and find the credit-implied volatilities and fear gauges to behave well. The forecasting accuracy of the credit-implied volatilities is found to be better than that of horizon-matched historical volatilities.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Byström, H. (2015). Credit-Implied Equity Volatility-Long-Term Forecasts and Alternative Fear Gauges. Journal of Futures Markets, 35(8), 753–775. https://doi.org/10.1002/fut.21701
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