EViews 3rd Week Assignment With Solution
EViews 3rd Week Assignment With Solution
The problems that follow are from the course text book. If it is referred to an EViews work file
that you yet haven’t created, you have to import the data from the corresponding Excel file. This
procedure is described in the text book.
Your solutions must be easy to follow and include figures and tables when prompted. The best
way to present the solutions is to use a Word document.
6.13 (Slightly changed compared to the textbook)
Select one of the stock series from the ‘CAPM.XLS’ Excel file, construct a set of continuously
compounded returns, and then perform a time-series analysis of these returns. The analysis
should include
a) An examination of the autocorrelation and partial autocorrelation functions.
b) An estimation of the information criteria for each ARMA model order from (0,0) to
(2,2), i.e. (0,0), (0,1), (0,2), (1,0), (2,0), (1,1), (1,2), (2,1) and (2,2)
c) An estimation of the model that you feel most appropriate given the results that you
found from the previous two parts of the question.
CORRELOGRAM OF RGE
Explanation
The second last column (Q-Stat) gives the Ljung-Box test statistic. The test statistics follows a
χ2(1) for the first row, a χ2(2) for the second row, and so on.
As a rule of thumb, a given autocorrelation coefficient is classed as significant if it is outside a
± 1.96 x 1/(T )1/ 2 band, where T is the number of observations.
±1.96×1/(136 )1/2 =±1.96 ×1/(11.6619) = ±1.96×0.0857 = (1.96×0.0857), (-1.96×0.0857)
= 0.1680, -0.1680
In this case, a correlation coefficient is classed as significant if it is bigger than approximately
0.168 or smaller than − 0.168. It can be deduced that the sixth and seventh of both
autocorrelation coefficients and partial autocorrelation coefficients are significant under this
rule.
Decision
Since the sixth and seventh acf coefficient are highly significant, the Ljung-Box joint test statistic
rejects the null hypothesis of no autocorrelation at the 1% level for all numbers of lags.
Question 6.13 B
An estimation of the information criteria for each ARMA model order from (0,0) to (2,2), i.e.
(0,0), (0,1), (0,2), (1,0), (2,0), (1,1), (1,2), (2,1) and (2,2)
ARMA (0,0)
ARMA (0,1)
ARMA (1,0)
Dependent Variable: RGE
Method: ARMA Maximum Likelihood (OPG - BHHH)
Date: 11/30/20 Time: 07:34
Sample: 2002M02 2013M04
Included observations: 135
Convergence achieved after 24 iterations
Coefficient covariance computed using outer product of gradients
ARMA (1,1)
ARMA (2,1)
Dependent Variable: RGE
Method: ARMA Maximum Likelihood (OPG - BHHH)
Date: 11/30/20 Time: 10:42
Sample: 2002M02 2013M04
Included observations: 135
Convergence achieved after 32 iterations
Coefficient covariance computed using outer product of gradients
Decision
From the above, I chose ARMA (2,2) model because it fulfils the following conditions.
1. ARMA (2,2) model has the lowest Akaike info criterion, although its Schwarz criterion, and
Hannan-Quinn criterion are not the lowest.
2. ARMA (2,2) model is the model with the highest number of significant estimated
coefficients.
3. ARMA (2,2) model is the model with the least volatility (Sigma 2), this condition enhances
the predictive power of the model.
4. ARMA (2,2) model is the model with the highest adjusted R 2, the model is good because the
included variables have significant role they play in the model as shown by the value of the
adjusted R2.
Question 6.13 C
An estimation of ARMA (2,2) model as the most appropriate.
ARMA ( 2,2 ) : RGE=α + β 1 RGEt −1+ β2 RGEt −2+ δ 0 μ0 +δ 1 μt −1 + δ 2 μ t−2
ARMA (2,2)
Dependent Variable: RGE
Method: ARMA Maximum Likelihood (OPG - BHHH)
Sample: 2002M02 2013M04
Included observations: 135
Convergence achieved after 29 iterations
Coefficient covariance computed using outer product of gradients
Decision
From the VAR Lag Order Selection Criteria result above, I selected a tenth order as optimal since
both the Akaike’s and the Hannan-Quinn criteria select the tenth order as optimal.
Question 7.1e continuation
Determine whether certain maturities lead or lag others, by conducting Granger
causality tests.
There is a causality from the US ten-year treasury bill (RUSTB10Y), the US three-year treasury
bill (RUSTB3Y), and the US one-year treasury bill (RUSTB1Y) to the US three-month treasury
bill (RUSTB3M).
Hence, there is bi-directional causality between the US three-year treasury bill
(RUSTB3Y) and the US ten-year treasury bill (RUSTB10Y), the US one-year treasury bill
(RUSTB1Y) and the US ten-year treasury bill (RUSTB10Y), the US three-year treasury bill
(RUSTB3Y) and the US five-year treasury bill (RUSTB5Y), the US one-year treasury bill
(RUSTB1Y) and the US five-year treasury bill (RUSTB5Y), t he US three-year treasury bill
(RUSTB3Y) and the US one-year treasury bill (RUSTB1Y), and between the US six-month
treasury bill (RUSTB6M) and the US one-year treasury bill (RUSTB1Y). This mean causality
runs in both directions between these variables as stated above.
But no causality between the US five-year treasury bill (RUSTB5Y) and the US three-
month treasury bill (RUSTB3M) in any direction.
t-Statistic Prob.*
t-Statistic Prob.*
GBP @ LEVEL
t-Statistic Prob.*
t-Statistic Prob.*
t-Statistic Prob.*
t-Statistic Prob.*
LM-Stat.
LM-Stat.
GBP at Level
Null Hypothesis: GBP is stationary
Exogenous: Constant
Bandwidth: 30 (Newey-West automatic) using Bartlett kernel
LM-Stat.
LM-Stat.
JPY at Level
Null Hypothesis: JPY is stationary
Exogenous: Constant
Bandwidth: 31 (Newey-West automatic) using Bartlett kernel
LM-Stat.
LM-Stat.
t-Statistic Prob.*
Intermediate Results:
EUR GBP JPY
Rho - 1 -0.007738 -0.012519 -0.004483
Rho S.E. 0.002932 0.003760 0.002225
Residual variance 8.07E-06 3.06E-06 0.256400
Long-run residual variance 1.28E-05 4.51E-06 0.408805
Number of lags 2 2 2
Number of observations 1459 1459 1459
Number of stochastic trends** 3 3 3
Decision
The test statistic (-3.363186) is more negative than the critical values (at the 5% and 10% level),
therefore the null hypothesis of a unit root in the test regression residuals can be rejected.
Conclusion: The series are cointegrated.