Michael T. Chng
Deakin University
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Featured researches published by Michael T. Chng.
International Review of Financial Analysis | 2003
Michael T. Chng; Gerard Gannon
The primary objective of this article is to investigate volatility transmission across three parallel markets operating on the Sydney Futures Exchange (SFE), both within and out of sample. Half-hourly observations are sampled from transaction data for the share price index (SPI) futures, SPI futures options, and 90-day bank accepted bill (BAB) futures markets, and the analysis is carried out using the simultaneous volatility (SVL) system of equations as well as competing volatility models. The results confirm the poor ability of GARCH models to fit intraday data. This study also applies an artificial nesting procedure to evaluate the out-of-sample volatility forecasts. Implied volatility has very limited (if any) predictive power when evaluated in isolation, whereas the SVL model with implied volatility embedded provides incremental information relative to competing model forecasts.
Journal of Business Finance & Accounting | 2010
Michael T. Chng
Gasoline (GA) and kerosene (KO) are extracted from crude oil (CO), such that the three fuel commodities share a chemical link. On the other hand, GA also shares an industrial link with natural rubber (NR) and palladium (PA) as complementary commodities that are heavily consumed by the automobile industry. We contrast the information content embedded in the two economic linkages. Focusing on TOCOM futures contracts written on the five commodities and centering on GA, we confirm that incremental information provided by either CO, KO or NR, PA over a buy-and-hold strategy and a naive forecast, are both statistically and economically significant. While the chemical link forecast is more profitable, a double-link forecast generated from a VECM with two cointegrating vectors (KO-GA and GA-NR prices) outperforms both single-link forecasts based on risk-adjusted profit net of transaction costs. Further comparisons against the profitability of commodity-based momentum strategies documented in Erb and Harvey (2006) and Miffre and Rallis (2007) show that the double-link forecast holds its own against the most profitable of the 75 momentum strategies considered. This strongly suggests that not only are there incremental profits to be gained from harnessing and combining economic links among commodity futures, the resultant incremental profits are economically significant against other proven commodity-based trading strategies in the existing literature.
Journal of Banking and Finance | 2009
Michael T. Chng
Journal of Futures Markets | 2004
Michael T. Chng
Journal of Futures Markets | 2014
Qingfu Liu; Michael T. Chng; Dongxia Xu
Journal of Futures Markets | 2013
Vincent Xiang; Michael T. Chng; Victor Fang
Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting | 2017
Vincent Xiang; Michael T. Chng; Victor Fang
Review of futures markets | 2012
Michael T. Chng; Grant Foster
Journal of Multinational Financial Management | 2004
Michael T. Chng
Accounting and Finance | 2014
Minh Phuong Doan; Chien-Ting Lin; Michael T. Chng