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unconditional

Unconditional expected shortfall backtest by Acerbi and Szekely

Description

example

TestResults = unconditional(ebts) runs the unconditional expected shortfall (ES) backtest of Acerbi-Szekely (2014).

example

[TestResults,SimTestStatistic] = unconditional(ebts,Name,Value) adds an optional name-value pair argument for TestLevel.

Examples

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Create an esbacktestbysim object.

load ESBacktestBySimData
rng('default'); % for reproducibility
ebts = esbacktestbysim(Returns,VaR,ES,"t",...
       'DegreesOfFreedom',10,...
       'Location',Mu,...
       'Scale',Sigma,...
       'PortfolioID',"S&P",...
       'VaRID',["t(10) 95%","t(10) 97.5%","t(10) 99%"],...
       'VaRLevel',VaRLevel);

Generate the ES unconditional test report.

TestResults = unconditional(ebts)
TestResults=3×10 table
    PortfolioID        VaRID        VaRLevel    Unconditional    PValue    TestStatistic    CriticalValue    Observations    Scenarios    TestLevel
    ___________    _____________    ________    _____________    ______    _____________    _____________    ____________    _________    _________

       "S&P"       "t(10) 95%"        0.95         accept        0.093       -0.13342         -0.16252           1966          1000         0.95   
       "S&P"       "t(10) 97.5%"     0.975         reject        0.031       -0.25011          -0.2268           1966          1000         0.95   
       "S&P"       "t(10) 99%"        0.99         reject        0.008       -0.57396         -0.38264           1966          1000         0.95   

Input Arguments

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esbacktestbysim (ebts) object, contains a copy of the given data (the PortfolioData, VarData, ESData, and Distribution properties) and all combinations of portfolio ID, VaR ID, and VaR levels to be tested. For more information on creating an esbacktestbysim object, see esbacktestbysim.

Name-Value Arguments

Specify optional pairs of arguments as Name1=Value1,...,NameN=ValueN, where Name is the argument name and Value is the corresponding value. Name-value arguments must appear after other arguments, but the order of the pairs does not matter.

Before R2021a, use commas to separate each name and value, and enclose Name in quotes.

Example: [TestResults,SimTestStatistic] = unconditional(ebts,'TestLevel',0.99)

Test confidence level, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of 'TestLevel' and a numeric value between 0 and 1.

Data Types: double

Output Arguments

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Results, returned as a table where the rows correspond to all combinations of portfolio ID, VaR ID, and VaR levels to be tested. The columns correspond to the following information:

  • 'PortfolioID' — Portfolio ID for the given data

  • 'VaRID' — VaR ID for each of the VaR data columns provided

  • 'VaRLevel' — VaR level for the corresponding VaR data column

  • 'Unconditional'— Categorical array with categories 'accept' and 'reject' that indicate the result of the unconditional test

  • 'PValue'— P-value of the unconditional test

  • 'TestStatistic'— Unconditional test statistic

  • 'CriticalValue'— Critical value for the unconditional test

  • 'Observations'— Number of observations

  • 'Scenarios'— Number of scenarios simulated to get the p-values

  • 'TestLevel'— Test confidence level

Simulated values of the test statistic, returned as a NumVaRs-by-NumScenarios numeric array.

More About

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Unconditional Test by Acerbi and Szekely

The unconditional test is also known as the second Acerbi-Szekely test.

The unconditional test is based on the unconditional relationship

ESt=Et[XtItpVaR]

where

Xt is the portfolio outcome, that is, the portfolio return or portfolio profit and loss for period t.

PVaR is the probability of VaR failure defined as 1-VaR level.

ESt is the estimated expected shortfall for period t.

It is the VaR failure indicator on period t with a value of 1 if Xt < -VaR, and 0 otherwise.

The unconditional test statistic is defined as:

Zuncond=1NpVaRt=1NXtItESt+1

Significance of the Test

Under the assumption that the distributional assumptions are correct, the expected value of the test statistic Zuncond is 0.

This is expressed as

E[Zuncond]=0

Negative values of the test statistic indicate risk underestimation. The unconditional test is a one-sided test that rejects when there is evidence that the model underestimates risk (for technical details on the null and alternative hypotheses, see Acerbi-Szekely, 2014). The unconditional test rejects the model when the p-value is less than 1 minus the test confidence level.

For more information on the steps to simulate the test statistics and the details for the computation of thep-values and critical values, see simulate.

Edge Cases

The unconditional test statistic takes a value of 1 when there are no VaR failures in the data or in a simulated scenario.

1 is also the maximum possible value for the test statistic. When the expected number of failures NpVaR is small, the distribution of the unconditional test statistic has a discrete probability jump at Zuncond = 1, and the probability that Zuncond1 is 1. The p-value is set to 1 in these cases, and the test result is to 'accept', because there is no evidence of risk underestimation. Scenarios with no failures are more likely as the expected number of failures NpVaR gets smaller.

References

[1] Acerbi, C., and B. Szekely. Backtesting Expected Shortfall. MSCI Inc. December, 2014.

Version History

Introduced in R2017b