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Adaptive Student's t-distribution with method of moments moving estimator for nonstationary time series

Abstract

The real life time series are usually nonstationary, bringing a difficult question of model adaptation. Classical approaches like ARMA-ARCH assume arbitrary type of dependence. To avoid their bias, we will focus on recently proposed agnostic philosophy of moving estimator: in time tt finding parameters optimizing e.g. Ft=τ<t(1η)tτln(ρθ(xτ))F_t=\sum_{\tau<t} (1-\eta)^{t-\tau} \ln(\rho_\theta (x_\tau)) moving log-likelihood, evolving in time. It allows for example to estimate parameters using inexpensive exponential moving averages (EMA), like absolute central moments mp=E[xμp]m_p=E[|x-\mu|^p] evolving for one or multiple powers pR+p\in\mathbb{R}^+ using mp,t+1=mp,t+η(xtμtpmp,t)m_{p,t+1} = m_{p,t} + \eta (|x_t-\mu_t|^p-m_{p,t}). Application of such general adaptive methods of moments will be presented on Student's t-distribution, popular especially in economical applications, here applied to log-returns of DJIA companies. While standard ARMA-ARCH approaches provide evolution of μ\mu and σ\sigma, here we also get evolution of ν\nu describing ρ(x)xν1\rho(x)\sim |x|^{-\nu-1} tail shape, probability of extreme events - which might turn out catastrophic, destabilizing the market.

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@article{duda2025_2304.03069,
  title={ Adaptive Student's t-distribution with method of moments moving estimator for nonstationary time series },
  author={ Jarek Duda },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2304.03069},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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