International Finance
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10679/314
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Browsing by By Publication Category "International Refereed Journal"
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ArticlePublication Open Access Adaptive pairs trading strategy performance in Turkish derivatives exchange with the companies listed on Istanbul stock exchange(Springer International Publishing, 2012-03-02) Bolgün, K. E.; Kurun, E.; Güven, Serhat; Güven, SerhatWe implemented model-driven statistical arbitrage strategies in Turkish equities market. Trading signals are generated by optimized parameters of distance method. When the trade in signal is triggered by the model, market-neutral portfolio is created by long in the synthetic ETF, which is based on constrained least squares regression of selected Istanbul Stock Exchange stocks and short in Turkish Derivatives Exchange (Turkdex) index futures contract. We performed pairs trading strategy based on a comparative mean reversion of asset prices with daily data over the period February 2005 through July 2011 in Istanbul Stock Exchange (ISE) and Turkdex. We constructed a hypothetical ISE30 ETF Index on a daily basis in order to originate pairs trading strategy with Turkdex. Because of the leverage rule of (1–10) index futures contracts, we had to evaluate spot stock pairs formation with futures contracts pairs strategy. The results indicate that applied pairs strategy produced overall returns of 901 per cent during the investment period, whereas naive strategy (buy and hold ISE-30 index) return for the same period was 111 per cent. Similar outperformance was observed in the Sharpe and Sortino ratios.ArticlePublication Metadata only Algorithmic pairs trading with expert inputs, a fuzzy statistical arbitrage framework(IOS Press, 2020) Bayram, M.; Akat, Muzaffer; Bulkan, S.; International Finance; AKAT, MuzafferPairs trading is a widespread market-neutral trading strategy aiming to utilize the relationship between pairs of financial instruments in efficient markets, where predictability of separate asset movements is theoretically not possible. The implication of trading pairs, following statistical analysis, is to buy the underpriced asset while short selling the overpriced. The predicted price relationship is determined through analysis of historical spread data between the members of the corresponding pair. The investor expects the price difference, in an efficient market, should converge and stocks return to their ‘fair value’, where the positions are closed and profit is realized. The main focus of this study is the contribution of the fuzzy engine to the existing pairs trading strategy. Widespread classical ‘crisp’ technique is chosen, utilized and compared with the developed ‘fuzzy’ model throughout the paper. In order to further improve this contribution, the expert opinions extracted from the Bloomberg database are also integrated into the fuzzy decision-making process. In most studies, transaction costs are simply ignored. As a final robustness check, the transaction costs are also considered. The improvement reached by the developed fuzzy technique is observed to be even more remarkable in this case.ArticlePublication Metadata only Analysis of cross-country variations in the depth of European mortgage markets(Springer Science+Business Media, 2016-09) Kutlukaya, M.; Erol, Işıl; International Finance; EROL, IşılTo date, quantitative analysis on the depth of mortgage markets across a broad set of countries has been very limited. This paper uses a rich and balanced data set on 31 European countries to investigate the cross-country variations in the depth of mortgage markets during the period 2005–2012. The present paper might be accepted as the updated and enriched version of existing research for the European region in terms of the coverage of countries, historical data and the empirical analyses. Our empirical findings reveal that developed countries have sizeable residential mortgage markets and this is mainly associated with higher urbanization rates and stronger legal rights. One of the most notable results of this study is that, statistical significance of explanatory variables in modeling the depth of the mortgage markets depends heavily on both the variables, countries (regions) included in the models and the regression methodology used. Hence, we argue that strong conclusions based on such analyses should be avoided and the findings of previous research on the variations of the depth of mortgage markets should be carefully evaluated.ArticlePublication Metadata only Anticipating the financial crisis: evidence from insider trading in banks(Oxford University Press, 2020-04) Akın, Özlem; Marín, J. M.; Peydro, J. - L.; International Finance; PARLAYAN, Özlem AkınBanking crises are recurrent phenomena, often induced by excessive bank risk-taking, which may be due to behavioural reasons (over-optimistic banks neglecting risks) and to conflicts of interest between bank shareholders/managers and debtholders/taxpayers (banks exploiting moral hazard). We test whether US banks' stock returns in the 2007-8 financial crisis are associated with bank insiders' sales of their own bank's shares in the period prior to 2006Q2 (the peak and reversal in real estate prices). We find that top-five executives' sales of shares predict bank performance during the crisis. Interestingly, effects are insignificant the sales of independent directors and other officers. Moreover, the top-five executives' impact is stronger for banks with higher exposure to the real estate bubble, where a one standard deviation increase of insider sales is associated with a 13.33 percentage point drop in stock returns during the crisis period. Finally, even though bankers in riskier banks sold more shares (furthering their own interests), they did not change their bank's policies, for example, by reducing bank-level exposure to real estate. The informational content of bank insider trading before the crisis suggests that insiders knew that their banks were taking excessive risks, which has important implications for theory, public policy and the understanding of crises, as well as a supervisory tool for early warning signals.ArticlePublication Metadata only An approximation of stochastic hyperbolic equations: case with Wiener process(Wiley, 2013-06) Ashyralyev, A.; Akat, Muzaffer; International Finance; AKAT, MuzafferIn the present paper, the two-step difference scheme for the Cauchy problem for the stochastic hyperbolic equation is presented. The convergence estimate for the solution of the difference scheme is established. In applications, the convergence estimates for the solution of difference schemes for the numerical solution of four problems for hyperbolic equations are obtained. The theoretical statements for the solution of this difference scheme are supported by the results of the numerical experiment.ArticlePublication Open Access Big data–enabled sign prediction for Borsa Istanbul intraday equity prices(Elsevier, 2023-12) Kılıç, A.; Güloğlu, B.; Yalçın, Atakan; Üstündağ, A.; International Finance; YALÇIN, AtakanThis paper employs a big data source, the Borsa Istanbul's “data analytics” information, to predict 5-min up, down, and steady signs drawn from closing price changes. Seven machine learning algorithms are compared with 2018 data for the entire year. Success levels for each method are reported for 26 liquid stocks in terms of macro-averaged F-measures. For the 5-min lagged data, nine equities are found to be statistically predictable. For lagged data over longer periods, equities remain predictable, decreasing gradually to zero as the markets absorb the data over time. Furthermore, economic gains for the nine equities are analyzed with algorithms where short selling is allowed or not allowed depending on these predictions. Four equities are found to yield more economic gains via machine learning–supported trading strategies than the equities' own price performances. Under the “efficient market hypothesis,” the results imply a lack of “semistrong-form efficiency.”ArticlePublication Metadata only A concave security market line(Elsevier, 2019-09) De Giorgi, E. G.; Post, T.; Yalçın, Atakan; International Finance; YALÇIN, AtakanWe provide theoretical and empirical arguments in favor of a diminishing marginal premium for market risk. In capital market equilibrium with binding portfolio restrictions, investors with different risk aversion levels generally hold different sets of risky securities. Whereas the traditional linear relation breaks down, equilibrium can be described or approximated by a concave relation between expected return and market beta, and a concave relationship between market alpha and market beta. An empirical analysis of U.S. stock market data confirms the existence of a significant concave cross-sectional relation between average return and estimated market beta. We estimate that the market risk premium is at least four to six percent per annum, substantially above traditional estimates. A practical implication for active portfolio managers is that the alpha of "betting against beta" strategies seems dominated by the medium-minushigh-beta spread rather than the low-minus-medium-beta spread. The success of such strategies thus largely depends on underweighting or short selling high-beta stocks.ArticlePublication Metadata only Corporate diversification and the cost of debt: evidence from REIT bank loans and mortgages(Springer, 2020-11) Demirci, İ.; Eichholtz, P.; Yönder, Erkan; International Finance; YÖNDER, ErkanThis paper investigates whether corporate diversification by property type and by geography reduces the costs of debt capital. It employs asset-level information on the portfolios of U.S. REITs to measure diversification and looks at two of their main sources of debt capital: 1,173 commercial mortgages and 952 bank loans. The paper finds that diversification across different property types does indeed dependably reduce the cost of these different types of debt. The effect is about 7 basis points for bank loans if a firm’s property Herfindahl Index is lowered by one standard deviation and this effect gets stronger for REITs with worse financial health – as measured by the interest coverage ratio. The corresponding effect for commercial mortgages is around 22 basis points for collateral diversification by property type. After the crisis, the salience of the collateral asset increases. For diversification across regions, we do not find a consistent relationship between real asset diversification and loan pricing.ArticlePublication Open Access Development and calibration of a currency trading strategy using global optimization(Springer Science+Business Media, 2013-06) Çağlayan, Mustafa Onur; Pinter, Janos D.; Economics; Industrial Engineering; ÇAĞLAYAN, Mustafa Onur; PINTER, JanosWe have developed a new financial indicator—called the Interest Rate Differentials Adjusted for Volatility (IRDAV) measure—to assist investors in currency markets. On a monthly basis, we rank currency pairs according to this measure and then select a basket of pairs with the highest IRDAV values. Under positive market conditions, an IRDAV based investment strategy (buying a currency with high interest rate and simultaneously selling a currency with low interest rate, after adjusting for volatility of the currency pairs in question) can generate significant returns. However, when the markets turn for the worse and crisis situations evolve, investors exit such money-making strategies suddenly, and—as a result—significant losses can occur. In an effort to minimize these potential losses, we also propose an aggregated Risk Metric that estimates the total risk by looking at various financial indicators across different markets. These risk indicators are used to get timely signals of evolving crises and to flip the strategy from long to short in a timely fashion, to prevent losses and make further gains even during crisis periods. Since our proprietary model is implemented in Excel as a highly nonlinear “black box” computational procedure, we use suitable global optimization methodology and software—the Lipschitz Global Optimizer solver suite linked to Excel—to maximize the performance of the currency basket, based on our selection of key decision variables. After the introduction of the new currency trading model and its implementation, we present numerical results based on actual market data. Our results clearly show the advantages of using global optimization based parameter settings, compared to the typically used “expert estimates” of the key model parameters.ArticlePublication Metadata only Do mutual funds herd in industries?(Elsevier, 2015-03) Çeliker, Umut; Chowdhury, J.; Sonaer, G.; International Finance; ÇELİKER, UmutThis study examines whether mutual funds herd in industries and the extent to which such herding impacts industry valuations. Using two herding measures proposed by Lakonishok et al. (1992) and Sias (2004) we document that mutual funds herd in industries. We show that industry herding is not driven by fund flows and that it is not a manifestation of individual stock herding. We also find evidence indicating that herding in industries by mutual funds is related to the industry momentum phenomenon first documented by Moskowitz and Grinblatt (1999), but it does not drive industry valuations away from their fundamentals.ArticlePublication Open Access The effects of foreign acquisitions on the value of industry peers(Cambridge University Press, 2023-03) Yılmaz, Ümit; International Finance; YILMAZ, ÜmitThis paper studies how industry peers' stock prices respond when another firm in the industry is acquired by a foreign firm. The average stock price reactions of industry peers in horizontal foreign acquisitions around deal announcements are significantly negative. Peers' returns are more negative in growing, less specialized, and competitive industries. Moreover, the negative stock price reactions of industry peers are related to future decreases in their operating performance. Overall, these results suggest that foreign acquisitions have strong competitive effects for the industry peers of U.S. target companies.ArticlePublication Open Access Foreign acquisition and credit risk: Evidence from the U.S. CDS market(Cambridge University Press, 2023-06-17) Yılmaz, Ümit; International Finance; YILMAZ, ÜmitThis article empirically analyzes the effect of foreign block acquisitions on U.S. target firms' credit risk as measured by their credit default swap (CDS) spreads. Foreign block purchases lead to a greater increase in the target firms' CDS premia post-acquisition compared to domestic block purchases. This effect is stronger when foreign owners are geographically and culturally more distant, and when they obtain majority control. The findings are consistent with an asymmetric information hypothesis, in which foreign owners are less effective monitors due to information barriers.ArticlePublication Metadata only Gender-specific preferences in global performance management - an empirical study of male and female leaders in a multinational context(Wiley, 2015-01) Festing, M.; Knappert, Lena; Kornau, A.; International Business and Trade; KNAPPERT, LenaThis study investigates gender-specific preferences in one important human resource management (HRM) practice—namely, global performance management (GPM). GPM has major consequences for the career advancement of women and can therefore also represent a barrier if it is rooted in traditional male corporate cultures. As prior research suggests that the underrepresentation of women in top management positions is a worldwide phenomenon with only minor national variations, empirical data were collected in five countries belonging to various cultural clusters: China, France, Germany, South Africa, and the United States. For all countries, the results show that preferences vary significantly between male and female managers for crucial parts of the GPM system (actors’ roles, evaluation methods, feedback procedures, and GPM purposes). This study confirms that the preferences of female managers do not match more male-oriented GPM practices, indicating that female managers are less satisfied with existing GPM procedures. It was particularly surprising to find that these gender differences do not vary according to cultural background, but rather display the same pattern in all investigated countries. These findings not only have the potential to explain the often-limited career advancement of women, but also have major implications for multinational companies aiming to retain talented women.ArticlePublication Metadata only Macroeconomic risk and hedge fund returns(Elsevier, 2014-10) Bali, T. G.; Brown, S. J.; Çağlayan, Mustafa Onur; Economics; ÇAĞLAYAN, Mustafa OnurThis paper estimates hedge fund and mutual fund exposure to newly proposed measures of macroeconomic risk that are interpreted as measures of economic uncertainty. We find that the resulting uncertainty betas explain a significant proportion of the cross-sectional dispersion in hedge fund returns. However, the same is not true for mutual funds, for which there is no significant relationship. After controlling for a large set of fund characteristics and risk factors, the positive relation between uncertainty betas and future hedge fund returns remains economically and statistically significant. Hence, we argue that macroeconomic risk is a powerful determinant of cross-sectional differences in hedge fund returns.ArticlePublication Open Access Managerial discretion and efficiency of internal capital markets(Elsevier, 2021-10) Şahin, Cansu İskenderoğlu; International Finance; ŞAHİN, Cansu IskenderoğluI use the staggered adoption of state-level antitakeover laws to provide causal evidence that managerial agency problems reduce the allocative efficiency of conglomerate firms. I find that increases in control slack following the passage of antitakeover laws reduces q-sensitivity of investment by 64%. The adverse impact of the laws appears mostly at conglomerate firms that benefited from disciplinary takeover threats prior to the passage of the laws, lacked alternative sources of pressure on management, or had the structural makings to fuel wasteful influence activities and power struggles among managers. These findings suggest that takeover threats impact the efficiency of resource allocation.ArticlePublication Open Access Market-neutral trading with fuzzy inference, a new method for the pairs trading strategy(Kaunas University of Technology, 2019) Bayram, M.; Akat, Muzaffer; International Finance; AKAT, MuzafferPricing of financial instruments and stock market predictions is a specific and relatively narrow field, which has been mainly explored by mathematicians, economists and financial engineers. Prediction to make profits in a martingale domain is a hard task. Pairs trading, a market neutral arbitrage strategy, attempts to resolve the drawback of unpredictability and yield market independent returns using relative pricing idea. If two securities have similar characteristics, so should their prices. Deviation from the acceptable similarity range in price is considered an anomaly, and whenever noticed, trading is executed assuming the anomaly will correct itself. This work proposes a fuzzy inference model for the market-neutral pairs trading strategy. Fuzzy logic lets mimicking human decision-making in a complex trading environment and taking advantage of arbitrage opportunities that the crisp models may miss to acquire for trade decision-making. Spread between two co-integrated stocks and volatility of the spread are used as decision-making inputs. The main focus of this study is the contribution of the fuzzy engine to the existing pairs trading strategies based on the spread measure. Widespread classical 'crisp' techniques are chosen and compared with the developed fuzzy' model. Significant enhancement on the performance of the trading strategies has been reported.ArticlePublication Open Access Numerical discretization of stochastic oscillators with generalized numerical integrators(Vinča Institute of Nuclear Sciences, 2021) Sirma, A.; Kosker, R.; Akat, Muzaffer; International Finance; AKAT, MuzafferIn this study, we propose a numerical scheme for stochastic oscillators with additive noise obtained by the method of variation of constants formula using generalized numerical integrators. For both of the displacement and the velocity components, we show that the scheme has an order of 3/2 in one step convergence and a first order in overall convergence. Theoretical statements are supported by numerical experiments.ArticlePublication Open Access On the numerical schemes for Langevin-type equations(Karaganda University, 2020) Akat, Muzaffer; Kosker, R.; Sirma, A.; International Finance; AKAT, MuzafferIn this paper, a numerical approach is proposed based on the variation-of-constants formula for the numerical discretization Langevin-type equations. Linear and non-linear cases are treated separately. The proofs of convergence have been provided for the linear case, and the numerical implementation has been executed for the non-linear case. The order one convergence for the numerical scheme has been shown both theoretically and numerically. The stability of the numerical scheme has been shown numerically and depicted graphically.ArticlePublication Open Access Political connections and informed trading: Evidence from TARP(Wiley, 2021-09) Akın, Özlem; Coleman, N. S.; Fons‐Rosen, C.; Peydró, J.-L.; International Finance; PARLAYAN, Özlem AkınWe study insider trading behavior surrounding the largest bank bailout in history: Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). In politically connected banks, insider buying during the pre-TARP period is associated with increases in abnormal returns around bank-specific TARP announcement; for unconnected banks, trading and returns are uncorrelated. Results hold across insiders within the same bank and are stronger for finance-related government connections. Through a Freedom of Information Act request, we obtained the previously undisclosed TARP funds requested; the ratio of received to requested funds correlates both with abnormal returns and insider buying behavior in connected banks.ArticlePublication Open Access Price of regulations: Regulatory costs and the cross-section of stock returns(Oxford University Press, 2024-01) Ince, B.; Özsöylev, Han Nazmi; International Finance; ÖZSÖYLEV, Han NazmiRegulations introduce significant fixed costs and add to operating leverage. Fixed regulatory costs that contribute to operating leverage should generate a risk premium. To explore whether such a premium exists, we introduce a measure of "regulatory operating leverage" that reflects the importance of fixed regulatory costs in a firm's cost structure. Regulatory operating leverage predicts stock returns in the cross-section, and a zero-cost high-low regulatory operating leverage strategy generates positive and significant risk-adjusted return. Finally, the impact of regulatory operating leverage on returns is due to the (systematic) risk contribution of fixed regulatory costs.