Page de résumé pour/Title page for BelnUcetd-02032009-123244


Type de document Thèse/Dissertation
Auteur Motta, Giovanni
Adresse e-mail de l'auteur g.motta@ke.unimaas.nl
URN BelnUcetd-02032009-123244
Langue Anglais/English
Titre Evolutionary factor analysis
Intitulé du diplôme STAT 3 - Doctorat en sciences (statistique)
Département/Domaine EUEN/STAT - Institut de statistique
Adresse e-mail du département info-stat@uclouvain.be
Jury
Nom Titre
Eichler, Michael Membre du jury/Committee Member
Hallin, Marc Membre du jury/Committee Member
Lippi, Marco Membre du jury/Committee Member
Simar, Léopold Membre du jury/Committee Member
Van Bellegem, Sébastien Membre du jury/Committee Member
Hafner, Christian Président du jury/Committee Chair
von Sachs, Rainer Promoteur/Director
Mots-clés
  • Approximate factor models
  • Local stationarity
  • Principal components
Date de défense 2009-02-06
Type d'accès unrestricted
Résumé
Linear factor models have attracted considerable interest over recent years especially in the econometrics literature. The intuitively appealing idea to explain a panel of economic variables by a few common factors is one of the reasons for their popularity. From a statistical viewpoint, the need to reduce the cross-section

dimension to a much smaller factor space dimension is obvious considering the large data sets available in economics and finance.

One of the characteristics of the traditional factor model is that the process is stationary in the time dimension. This appears restrictive, given the fact that over long time periods it is unlikely that e.g. factor loadings remain constant. For example, in the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) of Sharpe (1964) and

Lintner (1965), typical empirical results show that factor loadings are time-varying, which in the CAPM is caused by time-varying second moments.

In this thesis we generalize the tools of factor analysis for the study of stochastic processes whose behavior evolves over time. In particular, we introduce a new class of factor models with loadings that are allowed to be smooth functions of time. To estimate the resulting nonstationary factor model we generalize the properties of the principal components technique to the time-varying framework. We mainly consider separately two classes of Evolutionary Factor Models: Evolutionary Static Factor Models (Chapter 2) and Evolutionary Dynamic Factor Models (Chapter 3).

In Chapter 2 we propose a new approximate factor model where the common components are static but

nonstationary. The nonstationarity is introduced by the time-varying factor loadings, that are estimated by the eigenvectors of a nonparametrically estimated covariance matrix. Under simultaneous asymptotics

(cross-section and time dimension go to infinity simultaneously), we give conditions for consistency of our estimators of the time varying covariance matrix, the loadings and the factors. This paper generalizes to the locally stationary case the results given by Bai (2003) in the stationary framework. A simulation study

illustrates the performance of these estimators.

The estimators proposed in Chapter 2 are based on a nonparametric estimator of the covariance matrix

whose entries are computed with the same moothing parameter. This approach has the advantage of

guaranteeing a positive definite estimator but it does not adapt to the different degree of smoothness of the different entries of the covariance matrix. In Chapter 5 we give an additional theoretical result which explains how to construct a positive definite estimate of the covariance matrix while while permitting different

smoothing parameters. This estimator is based on the Cholesky decomposition of a pre-estimator of the covariance matrix.

In Chapter 3 we introduce the dynamics in our modeling. This model generalizes the dynamic (but

stationary) factor model of Forni et al. (2000), as well as the nonstationary (but static) factor model of Chapter 2. In the stationary (dynamic) case, Forni et al. (2000) show that the common components are estimated by the eigenvectors of a consistent estimator of the spectral density matrix, which is a matrix depending only on the frequency. In the evolutionary framework the dynamics of the model is explained by a time-varying spectral density matrix. This operator is a function of time as well as of the frequency.

In this chapter we show that the common components of a locally stationary dynamic factor model can be estimated consistently by the eigenvectors of a consistent estimator of the time-varying spectral density matrix.

In Chapter 4 we apply our theoretical results to real data and compare the performance of our approach with that based on standard techniques. Chapter 6 concludes and mention the main questions for future research.

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