Serial dependence and predictability are two sides of the same coin. The literature has considered alternative measures of these two fundamental concepts. In this article, we aim to distill the most predictable aspect of a univariate time series, that is, the one for which predictability is optimized. Our target measure is the mutual information between the past and future of a random process, a broad measure of predictability that takes into account all future forecast horizons, rather than focusing on the one-step-ahead prediction error mean square error. The most predictable aspect is defined as the measurable transformation of the series that maximizes the mutual information between past and future. This transformation arises from the linear combination of a set of basis functions localized at the quantiles of the unconditional distribution of the process. The mutual information is estimated as a function of the sample partial autocorrelations, using a semiparametric method that estimates an infinite sum by a regularized finite sum. The second most predictable aspect can also be defined, subject to suitable orthogonality restrictions. Finally, we illustrate the use of the most predictable aspect for testing the null hypothesis of no predictability and for point and interval prediction of the original time series.
Proietti, T. (2024). Another look at dependence: the most predictable aspects of time series. JOURNAL OF BUSINESS & ECONOMIC STATISTICS, Journal of Business & Economic Statistics [10.1080/07350015.2024.2424345].
Another look at dependence: the most predictable aspects of time series
Proietti, T
2024-01-01
Abstract
Serial dependence and predictability are two sides of the same coin. The literature has considered alternative measures of these two fundamental concepts. In this article, we aim to distill the most predictable aspect of a univariate time series, that is, the one for which predictability is optimized. Our target measure is the mutual information between the past and future of a random process, a broad measure of predictability that takes into account all future forecast horizons, rather than focusing on the one-step-ahead prediction error mean square error. The most predictable aspect is defined as the measurable transformation of the series that maximizes the mutual information between past and future. This transformation arises from the linear combination of a set of basis functions localized at the quantiles of the unconditional distribution of the process. The mutual information is estimated as a function of the sample partial autocorrelations, using a semiparametric method that estimates an infinite sum by a regularized finite sum. The second most predictable aspect can also be defined, subject to suitable orthogonality restrictions. Finally, we illustrate the use of the most predictable aspect for testing the null hypothesis of no predictability and for point and interval prediction of the original time series.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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