This paper seeks to investigate the relationship between volatility and autocorrelation in major European stock index futures markets.
Abstract
Purpose
This paper seeks to investigate the relationship between volatility and autocorrelation in major European stock index futures markets.
Design/methodology/approach
The methodology is based on the exponential autoregressive model with conditionally heteroskedastic errors (EAR‐GARCH).
Findings
The evidence points to a negative relationship between volatility and autocorrelation. Specifically, autocorrelation is low during volatile periods and high during calm periods. This evidence is in agreement with LeBaron's findings for US stock market returns, suggesting that return dynamics are similar across asset categories.
Research limitations/implications
An obvious limitation of this study is the lack of a theoretical justification for the observed relationships in futures markets, an area where future research should be directed.
Practical implications
The observed relationships suggest that futures prices are non‐linearly predictable so that short‐term trading could produce abnormal returns.
Originality/value
The paper documents a negative relationship between volatility and autocorrelation in major European futures markets. This finding should be of interest to researchers and market participants.