2018
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3164246
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Dissection of Bitcoin's Multiscale Bubble History

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
2
1

Citation Types

0
29
0

Year Published

2018
2018
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
5
4

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 25 publications
(29 citation statements)
references
References 56 publications
0
29
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The Bitcoin phenomenon has attracted significant attention in the academic literature with regard to its fundamental value (Woo, Gordon, and Iaralov (2013), Garcia et al (2014), Hayes (2015), Hayes (2017)), price dynamics (Buchholz et al (2012), Kristoufek (2013), Garcia et al (2014), Garcia and Schweitzer (2015), Glaser et al (2014), , Bouoiyour, Selmi, and Tiwari (2015), Ciaian, Rajcaniova, and Kancs (2016), Bouri, Azzi, and Dyhrberg (2017)), bubble modelling (MacDonell (2014), Cheah and Fry (2015), Gerlach, Demos, and Sornette (2018)), price discovery (Brandvold et al (2015)), and more recently about univariate volatility modelling (Dyhrberg (2016a) Gkillas and Katsiampa (2018) studied the tail behavior of the returns of five major cryptocurrencies by using again extreme value analysis and computing the Valueat-Risk and Expected Shortfall, but no backtesting analysis was implemented. Trucios (2018) compared the one-step-ahead volatility forecast of Bitcoin using several GARCH-type models and also evaluated the performance of several procedures when estimating the Value-at-Risk.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The Bitcoin phenomenon has attracted significant attention in the academic literature with regard to its fundamental value (Woo, Gordon, and Iaralov (2013), Garcia et al (2014), Hayes (2015), Hayes (2017)), price dynamics (Buchholz et al (2012), Kristoufek (2013), Garcia et al (2014), Garcia and Schweitzer (2015), Glaser et al (2014), , Bouoiyour, Selmi, and Tiwari (2015), Ciaian, Rajcaniova, and Kancs (2016), Bouri, Azzi, and Dyhrberg (2017)), bubble modelling (MacDonell (2014), Cheah and Fry (2015), Gerlach, Demos, and Sornette (2018)), price discovery (Brandvold et al (2015)), and more recently about univariate volatility modelling (Dyhrberg (2016a) Gkillas and Katsiampa (2018) studied the tail behavior of the returns of five major cryptocurrencies by using again extreme value analysis and computing the Valueat-Risk and Expected Shortfall, but no backtesting analysis was implemented. Trucios (2018) compared the one-step-ahead volatility forecast of Bitcoin using several GARCH-type models and also evaluated the performance of several procedures when estimating the Value-at-Risk.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, standard models for market risk tend to work poorly with cryptocurrencies due to the frequent presence of structural breaks, see Bouri et al (2016), Fantazzini et al (2016), Fantazzini et al (2017), Mensi, Al-Yahyaee, and Kang (2018) and Thies and Molnar (2018). To make matters worse, price manipulations and market frauds caused by the lack of financial oversight (Gandal et al (2018), Griffin andShams (2018)) and the fact that cryptocurrencies are still mainly used for speculative purposes, make financial bubbles a recurring phenomenon, see Corbet, Lucey, and Yarovaya (2018), Cheah and Fry (2015) and Gerlach, Demos, and Sornette (2018). A potential solution could be to use complex model…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We now mention some related works. A methodology to detect bubbles in the price dynamics of cryptocurrencies (specifically, Bitcoin), using multi-scale analysis, as well as k-means clustering, is presented in [19]. In [9] the predictability of cryptocurrencies time series is investigated through several alternative univariate and multivariate models in point and density forecasting.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With regard to the expected return, the cryptocurrencies are characterised by values that rise and fall (Bech and Garratt ; Liew and Hewlett ; Chuen et al ; Frunza and Guegan ; Gerlach et al ). In some cases, their values change with financial anomalies (Caporale et al ; Caporale and Plastun ; Liu and Tsyvinski ).…”
Section: Would We Like Central Bank Digital Currencies and Cryptocurrmentioning
confidence: 99%