Artificial Neural Networks for Realized Volatility Prediction in Cryptocurrency Time Series

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Abstract

Realized volatility (RV) is defined as the sum of the squares of logarithmic returns on high-frequency sampling grid and aggregated over a certain time interval, typically a trading day in finance. It is not a priori clear what the aggregation period should be in case of continuously traded cryptocurrencies at online exchanges. In this work, we aggregate RV values using minute-sampled Bitcoin returns over 3-h intervals. Next, using the RV time series, we predict the future values based on the past samples using a plethora of machine learning methods, ANN (MLP, GRU, LSTM), SVM, and Ridge Regression, which are compared to the Heterogeneous Auto-Regressive Realized Volatility (HARRV) model with optimized lag parameters. It is shown that Ridge Regression performs the best, which supports the auto-regressive dynamics postulated by HARRV model. Mean Squared Error values by the neural-network based methods closely follow, whereas the SVM shows the worst performance. The present benchmarks can be used for dynamic risk hedging in algorithmic trading at cryptocurrency markets.

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Miura, R., Pichl, L., & Kaizoji, T. (2019). Artificial Neural Networks for Realized Volatility Prediction in Cryptocurrency Time Series. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 11554 LNCS, pp. 165–172). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-22796-8_18

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