Research article

Modelling the volatility of Bitcoin returns using GARCH models

  • Received: 17 October 2019 Accepted: 26 September 2019 Published: 09 December 2019
  • JEL Codes: C01

  • Bitcoin has received a lot of attention from both investors and analysts, as it forms the highest market capitalization in the cryptocurrency market. This paper evaluates the volatility of Bitcoin returns using three GARCH models (sGARCH, iGARCH, and tGARCH). The new development allows for the modeling of volatility clustering effects, the leptokurtic and the skewed distribution in the return series of Bitcoin. Comparative to the Students't-distribution and the Generalized error distribution, the Normal Inverse Gaussian (NIG) distribution captured adequately the leptokurtic and skewness in all the GARCH models. The tGARCH model was the best model as it described the asymmetric occurrence of shocks in the Bitcoin market. That is, the response of investors to the same amount of good and bad news are distinct. From the empirical results, it can be concluded that tGARCH-NIG was the best model to estimate the volatility in the return series of Bitcoin. Generally, it would be optimal to use the NIG distribution in GARCH type models since time series of most cryptocurrency are leptokurtic.

    Citation: Samuel Asante Gyamerah. Modelling the volatility of Bitcoin returns using GARCH models[J]. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2019, 3(4): 739-753. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2019.4.739

    Related Papers:

    [1] Lukáš Pichl, Taisei Kaizoji . Volatility Analysis of Bitcoin Price Time Series. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2017, 1(4): 474-485. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2017.4.474
    [2] Rubaiyat Ahsan Bhuiyan, Tanusree Chakravarty Mukherjee, Kazi Md Tarique, Changyong Zhang . Hedge asset for stock markets: Cryptocurrency, Cryptocurrency Volatility Index (CVI) or Commodity. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2025, 9(1): 131-166. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2025005
    [3] Zheng Nan, Taisei Kaizoji . Bitcoin-based triangular arbitrage with the Euro/U.S. dollar as a foreign futures hedge: modeling with a bivariate GARCH model. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2019, 3(2): 347-365. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2019.2.347
    [4] Makoto Nakakita, Teruo Nakatsuma . Analysis of the trading interval duration for the Bitcoin market using high-frequency transaction data. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2025, 9(1): 202-241. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2025007
    [5] Lennart Ante . Bitcoin transactions, information asymmetry and trading volume. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2020, 4(3): 365-381. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2020017
    [6] Sahar Charfi, Farouk Mselmi . Modeling exchange rate volatility: application of GARCH models with a Normal Tempered Stable distribution. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2022, 6(2): 206-222. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2022009
    [7] Francisco Jareño, María de la O González, José M. Almansa . Interest rate sensitivity of traditional, green, and stable cryptocurrencies: A comparative study across market conditions. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2025, 9(1): 100-130. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2025004
    [8] Tetsuya Takaishi . Volatility estimation using a rational GARCH model. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2018, 2(1): 127-136. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2018.1.127
    [9] Bharti, Ashish Kumar . Asymmetrical herding in cryptocurrency: Impact of COVID 19. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2022, 6(2): 326-341. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2022014
    [10] Nilcan Mert, Mustafa Caner Timur . Bitcoin and money supply relationship: An analysis of selected country economies. Quantitative Finance and Economics, 2023, 7(2): 229-248. doi: 10.3934/QFE.2023012
  • Bitcoin has received a lot of attention from both investors and analysts, as it forms the highest market capitalization in the cryptocurrency market. This paper evaluates the volatility of Bitcoin returns using three GARCH models (sGARCH, iGARCH, and tGARCH). The new development allows for the modeling of volatility clustering effects, the leptokurtic and the skewed distribution in the return series of Bitcoin. Comparative to the Students't-distribution and the Generalized error distribution, the Normal Inverse Gaussian (NIG) distribution captured adequately the leptokurtic and skewness in all the GARCH models. The tGARCH model was the best model as it described the asymmetric occurrence of shocks in the Bitcoin market. That is, the response of investors to the same amount of good and bad news are distinct. From the empirical results, it can be concluded that tGARCH-NIG was the best model to estimate the volatility in the return series of Bitcoin. Generally, it would be optimal to use the NIG distribution in GARCH type models since time series of most cryptocurrency are leptokurtic.


    The cryptocurrency market continues to be a potential source of financial instability and its impact on the financial market still remains uncertain. Different from other financial assets which are regualarized, there is no formal regulation for cryptocurrencies. Cryptocurrencies also differ significantly from other financial assets on the financial market and thus creates great propsects for investors and market players in terms of portfolio analysis, risk management and even consumer sentiment analysis Dyhrberg (2016). In the cryptocurrency market, volatility modelling is important in measuring the riskiness of an investment. Volatility can be define as a measure of the dispersion in a probability density. Market players and investors are therefore interested in accurate estimation of volatility in the cryptocurrency market. This is as a result of the correlation between volatility and returns on investment. It is notable that volatility is not directly observable and as a result there is increasing need for efficient model that can capture the price volatility in the cryptocurrency market. Estimating the volatility of Bitcoin is very crucial since Bitcoin has the highest market capitalization in the cryptocurrency market.

    Most financial time series data have shown that the conditional distribution of returns series exhibit several stylized features such as excess kurtosis, negative skewness, price jumps, leverage effects, timevarying volatility, and volatility clustering. These stylized facts and properties of the returns series have significant ramification for financial models especially risk-scenario distribution, volatility estimation and prediction. To capture these stylized facts in these data's, different volatility modelling tools have been developed to model and estimate volatility. Hence, modeling the temporal dependencies in the conditional variance of Bitcoin time series has been the interest of many economists and financial analysts. However, the Bitcoin market is relatively new and there have not been enough literatures on the different models used in estimating the volatility in the market. Gronwald (2014) modelled Bitcoin price data using an autoregressive jump-intensity GARCH model and a standard GARCH model. Their results indicated that the autoregressive jump-intensity GARCH model performed better in fitting the Bitcoin price data than the standard GARCH model. Gronwald (2014) used multiple threshold-GARCH and Asymmetric-power GARCH to measure and estimate the volatility in the price of Bitcoin. They used Akaike information criterion (AIC), Bayesian information criterion (BIC) and Hannan-Quinn information criterion (HQC) to capture the leverage and regime switching features of the conditional variance and concluded that Bitcoin market is not yet matured. In their study, Bouri et al. (2016) evaluated the safe-haven property of Bitcoin and its relationship to before and after the Bitcoin price crash of December 2013. Based on an asymmteric-GARCH, the authors concluded that Bitcoin has a safe-haven property in the pre-crash period and no safe-haven property post-crash period. Using the price of Bitcoin, Katsiampa (2017) studied the best conditional heteroscedasticity model in relation to goodness-of-fit. They revealed that the optimal model was the the AR-cGARCH model. By fitting 12 GARCH-type models to the log returns of exchange rates for seven different cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Chu et al. (2017) concluded that iGARCH (1, 1) with normal innovations is the optimal model. Their conclusion however differs from the known stylized fact* of financial time series data.

    *returns have fatty tails and high kurtosis

    This paper study the estimation capacity of different non-parametric GARCH-type models on volatility of the return series of Bitcoin for the period between 01 January, 2014 to 16 August, 2019. Non-parametric methods are applied to the GARCH-type models because they do not assume any distributional assumptions and can capture the kurtosis and fatty tails of the return series of Bitcoin. We employ the Students-t distribution, Generalized Error Distribution, and the Normal Inverse Gaussian distribution.

    In this study, closing price was selected as the price of Bitcoin because it reflected all the activities of Bitcoin for each trading day. Historical daily closing price of Bitcoin was extracted from 01/01/2014 to 16/08/2019 at https://coinmarketcap.com/ and consisted of 2054 trading days.

    Now, assume Pt and Pt1 represents the current day and previous day price of Bitcoin, then the return series/log returns (Rt) is calculated as

    Rt=log(Pt)log(Pt1) (1)

    The residuals data of Bitcoin are checked for normality. If the dataset is normally distributed, then a parametric statistic like the Normal distribution can be assumed. However, if the residuals data are not normally distributed, a non-parametric statistic will be used. If the normality test fails, it is important to consider the histogram and the normal probability plot to check the presence of outliers in the data set. We employed the Jacque-Bera (JB) test statistics and the Anderson-Darling (AD) test statistics for the normality test. The JB and the AD test statistics are defined as in equation 2 and 3 respectively:

    JB=n(S26+(K3)224), (2)

    where n is the sample size, S and K are the sample skewness and kurtosis respectively.

    AD=n1nni=1(2i1)[InF(Yi)+In(1F(Yni+1))], (3)

    where F() is the cumulative distribution function (CDF) for the specified distribution and i is the ith sample.

    The JB test (Jarque and Bera, 1987) uses the Lagrange multiplier approach on the Pearson family of distributions to derive tests for normality if observations and regression residuals. It is centered on sample skewness and kurtosis. The AD test (Anderson and Darling, 1954) was developed by Anderson and Darling in 1954. It gives more weight to the tails of distribution. AD test is based on the empirical distribution function. The JB and AD test compare the scores in the sample to a normally distributed set of scores with same standard deviation and mean. The null hypothesis of this test is ``sample distribution is normally distributed". The distribution is not normally distributed if the test is significant.

    To apply GARCH models to the Bitcoin returns series, the presence of stationarity and ARCH effects in the residual return series are tested. The Ljung-box and Lagrange multiplier (LM) test (Engle, 2001) are used to test for the presence of ARCH effects in the data.

    The Ljung Box test (Box and Pierce, 1970) is a method used in testing the absence of serial autocorrelation up to a specified lag k. It can be defined as

    H0: The observed data do not exhibit serial correlation

    H1: The observed data exhibit serial correlation

    The test statistics is given as:

    Q=N(N+2)hk=1ˆρ2kNk (4)

    where N is the sample size, h is the time lag, ˆρ2k is the estimated autocorrelation of the series at lag k.

    To apply GARCH models to the returns series data, it is important to test the residuals for the presence of AutoRegressive Conditional Heteroscedasticity (ARCH) effects. The LM test was used to test for the presence of ARCH effects. LM is defined as;

    H0: No ARCH effect

    H1: Presence of ARCH effects.

    The LM test statistics is given as:

    LM=N.R2χ2(q), (5)

    where N is the total number of observations, R2 forms the regression, and q is the number of restrictions.

    GARCH is an extension of the ARCH model that integrates a moving average (MA) part together with the autoregressive (AR) part.

    Define a GARCH (p, q) model as

    xt=σtϵtσ2t=ω+pi=1αix2ti+qj=1βjσ2tj (6)

    where ω>0, αi>0, βj>0, pi=1αi+qj=1βj<1. ϵt is the is a sequence of independent and identically distributed random variables. For the sake of tractability, the order of all the GARCH models used will be restricted to one.

    The standard GARCH model (Bollerslev, 1986) represented as sGARCH(1, 1) is given as

    σ2t=ω+α1ϵ2t1+β1σ2t1 (7)

    Suppose the sum of the coefficients in Equation 6 is equal to 1, the GARCH process is called an Integrated GARCH (iGARCH). That is, the iGARCH models are unit-root GARCH models. A basic characteristic of the iGARCH model is that the effect of past squared shocks ηti=x2t1σ2ti for i>0 on x2t is persistent. An iGARCH(p, q) model assumes the form

    xt=σtϵtσ2t=ω+pi=1βiσ2ti+qj=1(1βj)α2tj (8)

    Define an iGARCH (1, 1) model as

    xt=σtϵtσ2t=ω+β1σ2t1+(1β1)x2t1, (9)

    where 1>β1>0.

    The tGARCH model was developed independently by Ravichandran et al. (1989) and Glosten et al. (1993). A tGARCH(p, q) model assumes the form

    σ2t= +qi=1(αi+λi1ti)x2ti+pj=1βjσ2tj (10)

    where

    1t1={1,ifϵti<0,bad news0,ifϵti0,good news (11)

    αi>0, βj>0, and λi>0.

    The generalized version of the tGARCH TGARCH(1, 1) is given as:

    σ2t=ω+αx2t1+βσ2t1+λx2t11t1 (12)

    where α and α+λ denote the effect of good news and bad news respectively. A λ>0 is an evidence that bad news upsurge volatility in the Bitcoin market. This indicates the existence of leverage effects of the first order. For an asymmetric news effect, λ0.

    From the test of normality for the returns residuals in table 3 and figure 4, it is clear that the distribution of the residuals returns are not normally distributed. There is the presence of excess kurtosis and heavy-tails in the distribution of the residuals returns. To account for the excess kurtosis and fat tails that are present in the residuals of the returns series, we model the error term in the GARCH models with Student-t distribution, Generalized Error Distribution (GED), and Normal Inverse Gaussian (NIG) types of distributions. These distributions are appropriate to capture the excess kurtosis and the skewness in the residuals return series.

    Table 3.  Jacque-Bera and Anderson-Darling test of normality for the residuals of the returns series.
    Jacque-Bera test Anderson-Darling test
    P-value <2.2e16 <2.2e16

     | Show Table
    DownLoad: CSV
    Figure 4.  Histogram and normal q-q plot of return series of Bitcoin.

    The Student's t-distribution or the t-distribution is a sub-class of the continuous probability distributions. It is used when the sample size is small and the population standard deviation is unknown. It was proposed by Student (1908). The probability density function (pdf) of the t-distribution is defined as

    ft(x;v)=Γ(v+12)vπΓ(v2)(1+x2v)v+12,x(,) (13)

    where v is the number of degrees of freedom and Γ() is the gamma function.

    The log likelihood function is defined as below

    l(x;v)=NIn(Γ(v+12)vπΓ(v2))12Nt=1(Inσ2t+(v+1)In(1+x2tσ2t(v2))] (14)

    The standardized GED or the error distribution is a symmetrical unimodal sub-class of the exponential family with shape parameter v. The pdf of the GED is defined as in Equation 15,

    fGED(x;v)=k(v)exp{12|xλ(v)|v},x(,) (15)

    where v determines the tail weight with larger value of v giving lesser tai weight, k(v), and λ(v) are constant and are defined as

    k(v)=vλ(v)21+1vΓ(1v) (16)
    λ(v)={22vΓ(1v)Γ(3v)}1/2 (17)

    Γ(x)=0tx1etdt,x>0 is the Euler gamma function.

    The log likelihood function is defined as

    l(x;v)=Nt=1[In(vλ)12|xσ2tv|v(1+v1)In2InΓ(1v)12Inσ2t] (18)

    The NIG distribution was proposed by Barndorff-Nielsen (1977) and it is a sub-class of the generalized hyperbolic distribution. The pdf of an NIG distribution for a random variable X is defined as

    fNIG(x;α,κ,μ,δ))=αδπexp{δα2β2+β(xμ)}K1[αq(x)] (19)

    where q(x)=((xμ)2+δ2)1/2, α>0 determines the shape, 0≤∣κ∣≤α determines the skewness, δ>0 is the scaling, μR is the location parameter and xR. k1(x) is the modified Bessel function of the second kind with index 1. The NIG distribution has a heavier tail than the normal distribution and can take different kinds of shapes. From equation 19, the shape of an NIG density is described using a four dimensional parameters (α,κ,μ,δ). The NIG distribution is appropriate for capturing data sets with extremal observations, skewness, and fat tails or semi-heavy tails. The log-likelihood of the NIG distribution is given as

    l(x;α,κ,μ,δ)=nlog(αδπ)+nδα2κ2+κNt=1(xtμ)+Nt=1logK1(xt;α,δ,μ) (20)

    The best model was selected using two information criteria: Akaike information criteria (AIC) and Bayesian information criteria (BIC). AIC and BIC considers the accuracy of the model fit and the number of parameters in the model; rewarding a better fit and penalizing an increased number of parameters in the return series data. The optimal model that will be selected is the model with the minimum AIC and BIC values. The GARCH models used in this study were fitted using the maximum likelihood method.

    AIC=2InL(ˆΘ)+2k, (21)
    BIC=2InL+kInL(ˆΘ), (22)

    where n,k,n,Θ,ˆΘ represent the number of observations, number of unknown parameters, vector of the unknown parameters, and the maximum likelihood estimates of the vector of the unknown parameters respectively.highest market capitalization in the cryptocurrency market.

    The smaller the AIC and BIC values of a model, the better the fit of that model.

    The visualization in Figure 1 revealed that the entire cryptocurrency market is propped primarily by Bitcoin. Table 1 is the statistics of Bitcoin on the cryptocurrency market and table 2 presents the descriptive statistics of the return series of Bitcoin. The return series of Bitcoin is positively skewed. This indicates that the returns of Bitcoin is non-symmetric. The positive value of the skewness indicates that the distribution of Bitcoin return series is skewed to the right or positively skewed. The positive excess kurtosis (216.7461) indicates that the returns are leptokurtic. That is, the returns series has a fatty tail. Figure 2 shows the time series plot of Bitcoin price (left Figure) and the return series (right Figure) of Bitcoin for the time period. Figure 3 is the histogram and the normal quantile-quantile (q-q) plot of the return series for the same time period. The residuals plot is presented in Figure 4. There is the presence of fatty tails and skewness in the residuals of the return series. This is confirmed from the JB and AD test statistics in Table 3. Both tests rejected the normality at 5% significance level.

    Figure 1.  Cryptocurrencies by market capitalization.
    Table 1.  Bitcoin statistics, as at 01/09/2019.
    Cryptocurrency Return on investment (ROI) Market Capitalization All time high All time low
    Bitcoin 7,005.34% $172,355,391,698 $20,089.00 $65.53
    Note:Accessedathttps://coinmarketcap.com/on01/09/2019.

     | Show Table
    DownLoad: CSV
    Table 2.  Descriptive statistics of the three major cryptocurrency by market capitalization.
    Cryptocurrency Maximum Minimum Mean Standard deviation Skewness Kurtosis
    Bitcoin (USD) -0.8488 1.4744 0.0012 0.0600 216.7471 6.4820

     | Show Table
    DownLoad: CSV
    Figure 2.  Closing price and return series of Bitcoin.
    Figure 3.  Histogram and normal q-q plot of return series of Bitcoin.

    The Augmented Dickey Fuller (ADF) test (Dickey and Fuller, 1979) is used to test for stationarity. From Table 4, the null hypothesis of statonarity is rejected at 5% α-level of significance. Hence, there is no need to difference the return series. The Ljung-box and LM test are presented in Table 4. From the Ljung box test, the null hypothesis of ``no autocorrelation" in the squared residuals is rejected at 5% significance level. That is, there is dependency in the squared returns series of Bitcoin. Using the LM test, the null hypothesis of ``no ARCH effects" is rejected at 5% significance level. From the Ljung box and LM test, it can be concluded that the volatility ARCH effect is very much present in the return series. Hence, the GARCH models are used to model the returns series data.

    Table 4.  Test of Auto Regressive Conditional Heteroscedasticity (ARCH) effect.
    Ljung box test LM test ADF test
    P-value 7.835e05 <2.2e16 0.01

     | Show Table
    DownLoad: CSV

    Table 5 shows the results of the maximum likelihood estimate (MLE) of sGARCH(1, 1), iGARCH(1, 1), and tGARCH(1, 1) models for Bitcoin returns using student t-distribution. From the table, the log-likelihood value (4181.104) is maximum for tGARCH(1, 1) model. The values of the two information criterions (AIC = 4.0663, BIC = 4.0526) of tGARCH(1, 1) are minimum as compared to sGARCH(1, 1)-t and iGARCH(1, 1)-t. The visual QQ plot in Figure 5c is consistent with the AIC, BIC, and log likelihood values of the tGARCH(1, 1)-t. These results indicate that tGARCH(1, 1)-t model is the optimal model to describe the volatility of the return series of Bitcoin. Table 6 presents MLE results of sGARCH(1, 1)-GED, iGARCH(1, 1)-GED, and tGARCH(1, 1)-GED models for Bitcoin returns. Compared to the other models, the log-likelihood value of tGARCH(1, 1)-GED is the maximum. The AIC and BIC values of tGARCH(1, 1)-GED recorded the minimum values as compared to the other two models. Hence, the tGARCH(1, 1)-GED model is the best model compared to sGARCH(1, 1)-GED and iGARCH(1, 1)-GED. From Table 7, the tGARCH(1, 1)-NIG recorded the maximum log-likelihood value (4196.681). The AIC and BIC values (4.0805 and 4.0641 respectively) of tGARCH-NIG were the lowest. This indicates that tGARCH(1, 1) is the best model for the volatility of the return series of Bitcoin using the Normal Inverse Gaussian distribution.

    Table 5.  MLE results of sGARCH(1, 1), iGARCH(1, 1), and tGARCH(1, 1) models for Bitcoin returns with conditionally t-distributed errors.
    Model
    ˆω ˆα ˆβ 1/v ˆλ AIC BIC LogLikelihood
    sGARCH(1, 1) 0.000036 0.192227 0.806773 3.200514 -4.0367 -4.0258 4149.72
    (0.000012) (0.023060) (0.023828) (0.169435)
    iGARCH(1, 1) 0.000035 0.192695 0.807305 3.194742 -4.0379 -4.0297 4149.946
    (0.000010) (0.021763) (0.135971)
    tGARCH(1, 1) 0.001019 0.291106 0.835797 2.472141 0.007515 -4.0663 -4.0526 4181.104
    (0.000353) (0.048010) (0.018121) (0.157392) (0.059760)
    Note: Standard errors of estimates are reported in parentheses.
    Note 2: ˆω:The reaction of conditional variance}, ˆα:ARCH effect, ˆβ:GARCH effect, ˆλ:Leverage effect.

     | Show Table
    DownLoad: CSV
    Figure 5.  QQ plot of sGARCH, iGARCH, and tGARCH using the Student t-distribution (Student t).
    Table 6.  MLE results of sGARCH(1, 1), iGARCH(1, 1), and tGARCH(1, 1) models for Bitcoin returns with conditionally generalized error distribution errors.
    Model Estimated parameters
    ˆω ˆα ˆβ 1/v ˆλ AIC BIC LogLikelihood
    sGARCH(1, 1) 0.000039 0.192872 0.806128 0.860227 -4.0495 -4.0386 4162.87
    (0.000011) (0.025780) (0.022277) (0.030944)
    iGARCH(1, 1) 0.000039 0.193739 0.806261 0.859610 -4.0506 -4.0424 4162.95
    (0.000010) (0.022141) (0.029442)
    tGARCH(1, 1) 0.001298 0.212642 0.826352 0.851479 0.055244 -4.0632 -4.0495 4177.926
    (0.000337) (0.025368) (0.021071) (0.031225) (0.061816)
    Note1: Standard errors of estimates are reported in parentheses.

     | Show Table
    DownLoad: CSV
    Table 7.  MLE results of sGARCH(1, 1), iGARCH(1, 1), and tGARCH(1, 1) models for Bitcoin returns with conditionally normal inverse gaussian distribution errors.
    Model Estimated parameters
    ˆω ˆα ˆβ 1/v ˆκ ˆλ AIC BIC LogLikelihood
    sGARCH(1, 1) 0.00004 0.19748 0.80152 0.39161 -0.13314 -4.0599 -4.0462 4174.485
    (0.000012) (0.024326) (0.022933) (0.046759) (0.032272)
    iGARCH(1, 1) 0.000039 0.198112 0.801888 0.390387 -0.133277 -4.061 -4.050 4174.653
    (0.000010) (0.022055) (0.042123) (0.032213)
    tGARCH(1, 1) 0.001048 0.233978 0.828983 0.319214 -0.142017 -0.005427 -4.0805 -4.0641 4196.681
    (0.000302) (0.027732) (0.019678) (0.042593) (0.033599) (0.061556)
    Note: Standard errors of estimates are reported in parentheses.

     | Show Table
    DownLoad: CSV

    From the three selected models (tGARCH(1, 1)-t, tGARCH(1, 1)-GED, and tGARCH(1, 1)-NIG), the tGARCH(1, 1)-NIG was the most optimal model for capturing the the volatility of Bitcoin return series. This can be confirmed from the maximum log likelihood value and the minimum AIC and BIC values. This result is also in agreement from the visual plot in Figure 8c. It is therefore evident that the optimal model in terms of the information criterion, log likelihood, and QQ plot is the tGARCH(1, 1)-NIG. The volatility estimates obtained from tGARCH(1, 1)-NIG model is displayed in Figure 9a. It is evident that volatility moves through time. The density of tGARCH(1, 1)-NIG is shown in Figure 9b. Clearly, the NIG distribution was able to capture the fat tails and skewness in the distribution. This confirms the reliability and efficiency in using the NIG distribution for modelling the volatility of Bitcoin return series.

    Figure 6.  QQ plot of the sGARCH, iGARCH, and tGARCH using the Generalized Error Distribution (GED).
    Figure 7.  QQ plot of sGARCH, iGARCH, and tGARCH using the Normal inverse Gaussian (NIG) distribution.
    Figure 8.  QQ plot using of the best distribution from sGARCH, iGARCH, and TGARCH.
    Figure 9.  Conditional volatility and density of tGARCH(1, 1)-NIG.

    This paper studied the volatility of daily return series of Bitcoin from 01/01/2014 to 16/08/2019. The results of the statistical properties revealed that just like other financial time series data, the return series of Bitcoin are leptokurtic. Different GARCH type models (sGARCH, iGARCH, tGARCH) were compared and the tGARCH model was identified to be the most appropriate model for estimating the time-varying volatility in Bitcoin return series. To account for the skewness and fat tails in the Bitcoin time series for the years understudy, the Student-t, Generalized Error Distribution (GED), and Normal Inverse Gaussian (NIG) distribution were used to capture the tail distribution in the GARCH models. The NIG distribution performed better in capturing the fat tail and skewness in the return series distribution. Hence, the tGARCH-NIG model was the optimal model for modeling and estimating the volatility in the return series of Bitcoin. The results of this study are useful for investors and market players in investment decision-making and making monetary policies.

    The author declares that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.

    Data for this work are available from the author upon request.



    [1] Anderson TW, Darling DA(1954) A test of goodness of fit. J Am Stat Assoc 49: 765-769.
    [2] Barndorff-Nielsen O (1977) Exponentially decreasing distributions for the logarithm of particle size. Proc Royal Society London A Math Phys Sci 353: 401-419. doi: 10.1098/rspa.1977.0041
    [3] Bollerslev T(1986) Generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity. J Econometrics 31: 307-327.
    [4] Bouri E, Azzi G, Dyhrberg AH (2013) On the return-volatility relationship in the bitcoin market around the price crash of 2013. Available at SSRN 2869855.
    [5] Box GE, Pierce DA(1970) Distribution of residual autocorrelations in autoregressive-integrated moving average time series models. J Am Stat Assoc 65: 1509-1526.
    [6] Chu J, Chan S, Nadarajah S, et al. (2017) Garch modelling of cryptocurrencies. J Risk Financ Manage 10: 17. doi: 10.3390/jrfm10040017
    [7] Dickey DA, Fuller WA (1979) Distribution of the estimators for autoregressive time series with a unit root, J Am Stat Assoc 74: 427-431.
    [8] Dyhrberg AH (2016) Hedging capabilities of bitcoin. is it the virtual gold? Financ Res Lett 16: 139-144.
    [9] Engle R (2001) Garch 101: The use of arch/garch models in applied econometrics. J Econ Perspect 15: 157-168. doi: 10.1257/jep.15.4.157
    [10] Gronwald M (2014) The economics of bitcoins-market characteristics and price jumps.
    [11] Glosten LR, Jagannathan R, Runkle DE (1993) On the relation between the expected value and the volatility of the nominal excess return on stocks. J Financ 48:1779-1801. doi: 10.1111/j.1540-6261.1993.tb05128.x
    [12] Jarque CM, Bera AK(1987) A test for normality of observations and regression residuals. Int Stat Rev/Revue Internationale de Statistique, 163-172.
    [13] Katsiampa P (2017) Volatility estimation for bitcoin: A comparison of garch models. Econ Lett 158: 3-6. doi: 10.1016/j.econlet.2017.06.023
    [14] Ravichandran K, Bose S, Akgiray V, et al. (1989) Threshold generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity models. Res J Bus Manage 6: 55-80.
    [15] Student (1908) The probable error of a mean. Biometrika, 1-25.
  • This article has been cited by:

    1. Mohammad Reza Abbaszadeh, Mehdi Jabbari Nooghabi, Mohammad Mahdi Rounaghi, Using Lyapunov’s method for analysing of chaotic behaviour on financial time series data: a case study on Tehran stock exchange, 2020, 2, 2689-3010, 297, 10.3934/NAR.2020017
    2. Abderahman Rejeb, Karim Rejeb, John G. Keogh, Centralized vs. decentralized ledgers in the money supply process: a SWOT analysis, 2021, 5, 2573-0134, 40, 10.3934/QFE.2021003
    3. Viviane Naimy, Omar Haddad, Gema Fernández-Avilés, Rim El Khoury, J E. Trinidad Segovia, The predictive capacity of GARCH-type models in measuring the volatility of crypto and world currencies, 2021, 16, 1932-6203, e0245904, 10.1371/journal.pone.0245904
    4. Qiang Zhang, Wenliang Pan, Chengwei Li, Xueqin Wang, The conditional distance autocovariance function, 2021, 0319-5724, 10.1002/cjs.11610
    5. Shuanglian Chen, Hao Dong, Dynamic Network Connectedness of Bitcoin Markets: Evidence from Realized Volatility, 2020, 8, 2296-424X, 10.3389/fphy.2020.582817
    6. Chunliang Deng, Xingfa Zhang, Yuan Li, Qiang Xiong, Garch Model Test Using High-Frequency Data, 2020, 8, 2227-7390, 1922, 10.3390/math8111922
    7. Zhenghui Li, Yan Wang, Zhehao Huang, Risk Connectedness Heterogeneity in the Cryptocurrency Markets, 2020, 8, 2296-424X, 10.3389/fphy.2020.00243
    8. Xin Liang, Xingfa Zhang, Yuan Li, Chunliang Deng, Daily nonparametric ARCH(1) model estimation using intraday high frequency data, 2021, 6, 2473-6988, 3455, 10.3934/math.2021206
    9. Pierre J. Venter, Eben Maré, GARCH Generated Volatility Indices of Bitcoin and CRIX, 2020, 13, 1911-8074, 121, 10.3390/jrfm13060121
    10. Chunliang Deng, Xingfa Zhang, Yuan Li, Zefang Song, On the test of the volatility proxy model, 2020, 0361-0918, 1, 10.1080/03610918.2020.1836215
    11. Hakan Pabuçcu, Serdar Ongan, Ayse Ongan, Forecasting the movements of Bitcoin prices: an application of machine learning algorithms, 2020, 4, 2573-0134, 679, 10.3934/QFE.2020031
    12. Au Vo, Thomas A. Chapman, Yen-Sheng Lee, Examining Bitcoin and Economic Determinants: An Evolutionary Perspective, 2021, 0887-4417, 1, 10.1080/08874417.2020.1865851
    13. Parul Bhatia, Preeti Bedi, Causal Linkages Among Cryptocurrency and Emerging Market Indices: An Empirical Investigation, 2022, 0972-2629, 097226292211056, 10.1177/09722629221105670
    14. Amadeo Christopher, Kevin Deniswara, Bambang Leo Handoko, 2022, Forecasting Cryptocurrency Volatility Using GARCH and ARCH Model, 9781450396523, 121, 10.1145/3537693.3537712
    15. Xiaoling Chen, Xingfa Zhang, Yuan Li, Qiang Xiong, Daily LGARCH model estimation using high frequency data, 2021, 1, 2769-2140, 165, 10.3934/DSFE.2021009
    16. Răzvan Gabriel Hapau, 2022, Chapter 22, 978-3-031-09420-0, 387, 10.1007/978-3-031-09421-7_22
    17. Stephen Zhang, Ganesh Mani, Popular cryptoassets (Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Dogecoin), Gold, and their relationships: volatility and correlation modeling, 2021, 4, 26667649, 30, 10.1016/j.dsm.2021.11.001
    18. Elise Alfieri, Yann Ferrat, Une meilleure rémunération des mineurs : un effet positif sur la performance financière des cryptomonnaies, 2022, Prépublication, 1267-4982, I129, 10.3917/inno.pr2.0129
    19. Sahil Sejwal, Kartik Aggarwal, Soumya Ranjan Nayak, Joseph Bamidele Awotunde, 2023, Chapter 22, 978-981-19-2003-5, 251, 10.1007/978-981-19-2004-2_22
    20. Jihed Ben Nouir, Hayet Ben Haj Hamida, How do economic policy uncertainty and geopolitical risk drive Bitcoin volatility?, 2023, 64, 02755319, 101809, 10.1016/j.ribaf.2022.101809
    21. Viviane Naimy, Omar Haddad, Rim El Khoury, 2022, Chapter 30, 978-3-031-04215-7, 347, 10.1007/978-3-031-04216-4_30
    22. Francisco Jareño, María De La O González, Pascual Belmonte, Asymmetric interdependencies between cryptocurrency and commodity markets: the COVID-19 pandemic impact, 2022, 6, 2573-0134, 83, 10.3934/QFE.2022004
    23. Mamoona Zahid, Farhat Iqbal, Dimitrios Koutmos, Forecasting Bitcoin Volatility Using Hybrid GARCH Models with Machine Learning, 2022, 10, 2227-9091, 237, 10.3390/risks10120237
    24. Volkan ETEMAN, Erkan IŞIĞIÇOK, YÜKSEK FREKANSLI KRİPTO VARLIK OYNAKLIĞININ UZUN HAFIZA VE STOKASTİK ÖZELLİKLERİNİN FIGARCH MODELİ İLE İNCELENMESİ, 2022, 12, 1309-4602, 284, 10.53092/duiibfd.1124966
    25. Noureddine Benlagha, Wael Hemrit, Asymmetric determinants of Bitcoin's wild price movements, 2023, 49, 0307-4358, 227, 10.1108/MF-03-2022-0105
    26. Kennard Fung, Jiin Jeong, Javier Pereira, More to cryptos than bitcoin: A GARCH modelling of heterogeneous cryptocurrencies, 2022, 47, 15446123, 102544, 10.1016/j.frl.2021.102544
    27. Sylvia Gottschalk, Digital currency price formation: A production cost perspective, 2022, 6, 2573-0134, 669, 10.3934/QFE.2022030
    28. O.D. Adubisi, A. Abdulkadir, U.A. Farouk, H. Chiroma, The exponentiated half logistic skew-t distribution with GARCH-type volatility models, 2022, 16, 24682276, e01253, 10.1016/j.sciaf.2022.e01253
    29. Zied Ftiti, Wael Louhichi, Hachmi Ben Ameur, Cryptocurrency volatility forecasting: What can we learn from the first wave of the COVID-19 outbreak?, 2021, 0254-5330, 10.1007/s10479-021-04116-x
    30. Chuanhai Zhang, Huan Ma, Gideon Bruce Arkorful, Zhe Peng, The impacts of futures trading on volatility and volatility asymmetry of Bitcoin returns, 2023, 86, 10575219, 102497, 10.1016/j.irfa.2023.102497
    31. Xingren Xiang, Jiayuan Shen, Kaixiang Yang, Guoming Zhang, Jiren Qian, Chengyuan Zhu, 2022, Daily natural gas load forecasting based on sequence autocorrelation, 978-1-6654-6536-6, 1452, 10.1109/YAC57282.2022.10023872
    32. Serkan Aras, On improving GARCH volatility forecasts for Bitcoin via a meta-learning approach, 2021, 230, 09507051, 107393, 10.1016/j.knosys.2021.107393
    33. Samuel Asante Gyamerah, Ning Cai, Two-Stage Hybrid Machine Learning Model for High-Frequency Intraday Bitcoin Price Prediction Based on Technical Indicators, Variational Mode Decomposition, and Support Vector Regression, 2021, 2021, 1099-0526, 1, 10.1155/2021/1767708
    34. Samuel Asante Gyamerah, Collins Abaitey, Modelling and forecasting the volatility of bitcoin futures: the role of distributional assumption in GARCH models, 2022, 2, 2769-2140, 321, 10.3934/DSFE.2022016
    35. Yiming Wang, 2023, Cryptocurrency Market Volatility Forecasting, 9781450398046, 43, 10.1145/3584816.3584823
    36. Cagri Ulu, The dynamic relationship between BTC with BIST and NASDAQ indices, 2023, 19, 2719-3454, 113, 10.2478/fiqf-2023-0030
    37. Hachmi Ben Ameur, Zied Ftiti, Waël Louhichi, Interconnectedness of cryptocurrency markets: an intraday analysis of volatility spillovers based on realized volatility decomposition, 2024, 341, 0254-5330, 757, 10.1007/s10479-023-05757-w
    38. José Antonio Núñez-Mora, Mario Iván Contreras-Valdez, Roberto Joaquín Santillán-Salgado, Risk Premium of Bitcoin and Ethereum during the COVID-19 and Non-COVID-19 Periods: A High-Frequency Approach, 2023, 11, 2227-7390, 4395, 10.3390/math11204395
    39. İbrahim Korkmaz Kahraman, Dündar Kök, Day-of-the-Week and Month-of-the-Year Effects in the Cryptocurrency Market, 2024, 2149-1658, 10.30798/makuiibf.1387108
    40. Muhammad Abubakr Naeem, Raazia Gul, Muhammad Shafiullah, Sitara Karim, Brian M. Lucey, Tail risk spillovers between Shanghai oil and other markets, 2024, 130, 01409883, 107182, 10.1016/j.eneco.2023.107182
    41. Rasa Bruzgė, Jurgita Černevičienė, Alfreda Šapkauskienė, Aida Mačerinskienė, Saulius Masteika, Kęstutis Driaunys, STYLIZED FACTS, VOLATILITY DYNAMICS AND RISK MEASURES OF CRYPTOCURRENCIES, 2023, 24, 1611-1699, 527, 10.3846/jbem.2023.19118
    42. Hajo Holzmann, Bernhard Klar, Using proxies to improve forecast evaluation, 2023, 17, 1932-6157, 10.1214/22-AOAS1716
    43. Sera Şanlı, Mehmet Balcılar, Mehmet Özmen, Predicting the volatility of Bitcoin returns based on kernel regression, 2023, 0254-5330, 10.1007/s10479-023-05490-4
  • Reader Comments
  • © 2019 the Author(s), licensee AIMS Press. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
通讯作者: 陈斌, bchen63@163.com
  • 1. 

    沈阳化工大学材料科学与工程学院 沈阳 110142

  1. 本站搜索
  2. 百度学术搜索
  3. 万方数据库搜索
  4. CNKI搜索

Metrics

Article views(11761) PDF downloads(2227) Cited by(43)

Other Articles By Authors

/

DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
Return
Return

Catalog