Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
415408 | Computational Statistics & Data Analysis | 2014 | 17 Pages |
The unknown error density of a nonparametric regression model is approximated by a mixture of Gaussian densities with means being the individual error realizations and variance a constant parameter. Such a mixture density has the form of a kernel density estimator of error realizations. An approximate likelihood and posterior for bandwidth parameters in the kernel-form error density and the Nadaraya–Watson regression estimator are derived, and a sampling algorithm is developed. A simulation study shows that when the true error density is non-Gaussian, the kernel-form error density is often favored against its parametric counterparts including the correct error density assumption. The proposed approach is demonstrated through a nonparametric regression model of the Australian All Ordinaries daily return on the overnight FTSE and S&P 500 returns. With the estimated bandwidths, the one-day-ahead posterior predictive density of the All Ordinaries return is derived, and a distribution-free value-at-risk is obtained. The proposed algorithm is also applied to a nonparametric regression model involved in state-price density estimation based on S&P 500 options data.