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The econometrics of financial markets

TLDR
In this paper, Campbell, Lo, and MacKinlay present an attempt by three well-known and well-respected scholars to fill an acknowledged void in the empirical finance literature, a text covering the burgeoning field of empirical finance.
Abstract
This book is an ambitious effort by three well-known and well-respected scholars to fill an acknowledged void in the literature—a text covering the burgeoning field of empirical finance. As the authors note in the preface, there are several excellent books covering financial theory at a level suitable for a Ph.D. class or as a reference for academics and practitioners, but there is little or nothing similar that covers econometric methods and applications. Perhaps the closest existing text is the recent addition to the Wiley Series in Financial and Quantitative Analysis. written by Cuthbertson (1996). The major difference between the books is that Cuthbertson focuses exclusively on asset pricing in the stock, bond, and foreign exchange markets, whereas Campbell, Lo, and MacKinlay (henceforth CLM) consider empirical applications throughout the field of finance, including corporate finance, derivatives markets, and market microstructure. The level of anticipation preceding publication can be partly measured by the fact that at least three reviews (including this one) have appeared since the book arrived. Moreover, in their reviews, both Harvey (1998) and Tiso (1998) comment on the need for such a text, a sentiment that has been echoed by numerous finance academics.

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Do Professional Traders Exhibit Loss Realization Aversion

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine trades by populations of professional futures traders for evidence of activity best described by the "behavioral finance" literature, and find that traders hold losing trades longer than winning trades and that average position sizes for losing trades are larger than for winners.
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Do credit rating agencies add to the dynamics of emerging market crises

TL;DR: In this article, the role of credit rating agencies in international financial markets was investigated with an index of speculative market pressure and whether sovereign ratings changes have an impact on the financial stability in emerging market economies.
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Event study on the reaction of the developed and emerging stock markets to the 2019-nCoV outbreak

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the impacts of the 2019-nCoV outbreak on the global stock markets using a sample of 49 stock market indices of the developed and emerging markets in the world using the standard event methodology.
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History of the Efficient Market Hypothesis

TL;DR: In this paper, the evolution and development of the Efficient market hypothesis from its inception as theory of probability to Fama (1965) proposition and revision (Fama, 1970; 1991).
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When an Event is Not an Event: The Curious Case of an Emerging Market

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a sample of Mexican corporate news announcements from the period July 1994 through June 1997, and found that there is nothing unusual about returns, volatility of returns, trading volume, or bid-ask spreads in the event window.
References
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An Econometric Analysis of Nonsynchronous Trading

TL;DR: In this article, a stochastic model of nonsynchronous asset prices based on sampling with random censoring is developed to estimate the effects of infrequent trading on the time series properties of asset returns.
Book

An Econometric Analysis of Nonsynchronous Trading

TL;DR: In this paper, a stochastic model of nonsynchronous asset prices based on sampling with random censoring is developed, which allows the explicit calculation of the effects of infrequent trading on the time series properties of asset returns.
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An ordered probit analysis of transaction stock prices

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimate the conditional distribution of trade-to-trade price changes using ordered probit, a statistical model for discrete random variables, recognizing that transaction price changes occur in discrete increments, typically eighths of a dollar, and occur at irregularly-spaced time intervals.
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Quantitative Financial Economics: Stocks, Bonds and Foreign Exchange

TL;DR: This new edition of the hugely successful Quantitative Financial Economics has been revised and updated to reflect the most recent theoretical and econometric/empirical advances in the financial markets as discussed by the authors.
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Implementing option pricing models when asset returns are predictable

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a class of continuous-time linear diffusion processes for asset prices that can capture a wider variety of predictability, and provide several numerical examples that illustrate their importance for pricing options and other derivative assets.
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