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Making Cornish–Fisher fit for risk measurement

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-05, 13:08 authored by John D. Lamb, Maura E. Monville, Kai-Hong TeeKai-Hong Tee
The truncated Cornish–Fisher inverse expansion is well known and has been used to approximate value-at-risk and conditional value-at-risk. The following are also known. The expansion is available only for a limited range of skewness and kurtosis. The distribution approximation it gives is poor for larger values of skewness or kurtosis. We develop a computational method to find a unique corrected Cornish–Fisher distribution efficiently for a wide range of skewness and kurtosis. We show it has a unimodal density and a quantile function that is twice continuously differentiable as a function of mean, variance, skewness and kurtosis. We extend the univariate distribution to a multivariate Cornish–Fisher distribution and show it can be used together with estimation-error reduction methods to improve risk estimation. We show how to test goodness-of-fit. We apply the Cornish–Fisher distribution to fit hedge-fund returns and estimate conditional value-at-risk. We conclude that the Cornish–Fisher distribution is useful in estimating risk, especially in the multivariate case where we must deal with estimation error.

History

School

  • Business and Economics

Department

  • Business

Published in

Journal of Risk

Citation

LAMB, J.D., MONVILLE, M.E. and TEE, K-H., 2018. Making Cornish–Fisher fit for risk measurement. Journal of Risk, 21 (5), pp.53-81.

Publisher

Incisive Media © Infopro Digital Risk (IP) Limited

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Publisher statement

This paper was published in the journal Journal of Risk and is available at https://doi.org/10.21314/JOR.2019.408.

Acceptance date

2018-06-12

Publication date

2019-06-18

ISSN

1465-1211

Language

  • en