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Essays in Risk Management

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posted on 2021-12-09, 06:14 authored by Mahdi Yadipur

This thesis consists of five chapters that examines risk and uncertainty within two frameworks: foreign exchange market and real options. The first chapter is a preliminary part that overviews the structure of thesis. In the second chapter, I examine the impact of scheduled macroeconomic announcements on realised variance in the Canadian dollar/US dollar foreign exchange market. Information shocks as a whole are made up of public information shocks and private information shocks. I measure the public information shocks from the analyst forecast surprise and the private information shocks from volatility sensitivity to liquidity variables. I find that the realized variance is driven mainly by the latter rather than the former. However, my results for the most important announcements are not significant, which might be due to these being well-analysed publicly. Spread, as a proxy of private information shocks, is the most important liquidity measure, showing a significant increase around the arrival of announcements. My results are robust to joint effects of liquidity variables, considering announcements throughout the day (times other than 8:30 announcement), alternative measures of volatility (absolute return and modified absolute return), evaluation of announcements for US and Canada separately, examine the impact of surprise in model, and the economic classification of announcements. In the third chapter, I aim to evaluate risk and uncertainty using real options technique. I develop a framework to evaluate representative agents’ behaviour in a real options switching framework. I set up three models with revertible switching process under uncertainty and solve these using the alternating direction implicit algorithm. The models break down into: cash-cost model, cash-time model, and projection model. The cash-cost model captures the cash expenses of switching whereas the cash-time model not only captures the cash cost but also the exact time cost, which is critical in horticulture. The projection model presents an approximation of cash-time model that has less computational complexity. The results of my sensitivity analyses indicate that increases in cost, time, volatility, drift, and discount rate have negative impacts on the switch frequency. If the correlation between two crops is positive, it has negative impacts on switch frequency, otherwise it has positive impacts. Differences between the models are more pronounced over longer periods. In the fourth and fifth chapters, I extend the cash-time model from chapter three to evaluate orchardists’ behaviour in the Hawke’s Bay region. Chapter four examines the dataset thoroughly and provide a statistical review of orchards that will be modeled in chapter five. Orchardists have the incentive to switch from one type of apple to another as the apple profits change. In my model, orchardists have the option to carry on with the existing apple trees or to switch to competing apple types by uprooting the existing apple trees and planting new ones or grafting on the existing rootstock. The uprooting strategy is relatively expensive but is instantaneous, and results in young (unproductive) apple trees with a long life ahead of them. In contrast, the grafting strategy is less expensive and faster but continues with old trees. I compute the optimal land value at each age of apple trees from one-year to 33-years old. My results show that grafting is the optimal strategy when trees are young, whereas planting becomes optimal when they are old. Examining the apple dataset, I find that orchardists are biased against uprooting and grafting relative to my predictions. The deviation from what my model proposes and what orchardists follow in reality might be due to the assumption of my model and possible factors in the orchards that my model does not capture. My results show that the deviation from optimal policy for small orchardists is not significantly different from large orchardists.

History

Copyright Date

2020-01-01

Date of Award

2020-01-01

Publisher

Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

Rights License

Author Retains Copyright

Degree Discipline

Finance

Degree Grantor

Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

Degree Level

Doctoral

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy

ANZSRC Type Of Activity code

3 APPLIED RESEARCH

Victoria University of Wellington Item Type

Awarded Doctoral Thesis

Language

en_NZ

Victoria University of Wellington School

School of Economics and Finance

Advisors

Daglish, Toby; Saglam, Yigit