Tim Bollerslev

Tim Peter Bollerslev (born May 11, 1958) is a Danish economist, currently the Juanita and Clifton Kreps Professor of Economics at Duke University. A fellow of the Econometric Society, Bollerslev is known for his ideas for measuring and forecasting financial market volatility and for the GARCH (generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity) model. He is editor of the Journal of Applied Econometrics.

Tim Bollerslev
Born (1958-05-11) May 11, 1958
Copenhagen, Denmark
NationalityDanish
InstitutionDuke University
NBER
FieldEconometrics
Financial economics
Macroeconomics
School or
tradition
Neoclassical economics
Alma materAarhus University (M.S.)
University of California, San Diego (Ph.D.)
Doctoral
advisor
Robert F. Engle
ContributionsGARCH
Information at IDEAS / RePEc

Biography

Tim Bollerslev received his MSc in economics and mathematics in 1983 from the Aarhus University in Denmark. He continued his studies in the U.S., earning his Ph.D. in 1986 from the University of California at San Diego with a thesis titled Generalized Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity with Applications in Finance[1] written under the supervision of Robert F. Engle (Nobel Prize in Economics winner in 2003).

After his graduate studies, Bollerslev taught at the Northwestern University between 1986–1995 and at the University of Virginia between 1996–1998. Since 1998 he is the Juanita and Clifton Kreps Professor of Economics at Duke University.

He and Mark Watson are widely regarded as carrying forward the work of the Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert F. Engle, as acknowledged by Engle himself.[2]

Articles

  • Bollerslev, Tim (1986). "Generalized Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity". Journal of Econometrics. 31 (3): 307–327. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.468.2892. doi:10.1016/0304-4076(86)90063-1.
  • Bollerslev, Tim (1987). "A Conditional Heteroskedastic Time Series Model for Speculative Prices and Rates of Return" (PDF). The Review of Economics and Statistics. 69 (3): 542–547. doi:10.2307/1925546. JSTOR 1925546.
  • Bollerslev, Tim (1988). "A Capital Asset Pricing Model with Time-Varying Covariances". Journal of Political Economy. 96 (1): 116–131. doi:10.1086/261527.
  • Bollerslev, Tim (1990). "Modeling the Coherence in Short-run Nominal Exchange Rates: A Multivariate Generalized ARCH Model". The Review of Economics and Statistics. 72 (3): 498–505. doi:10.2307/2109358. JSTOR 2109358.
  • Bollerslev, Tim (1992). "ARCH Modeling in Finance: A Review of the Theory and Empirical Evidence". Journal of Econometrics. 52 (1–2): 5–59. doi:10.1016/0304-4076(92)90064-x.
gollark: I'm entirely accepting of moral standards which are reasonably reciprocal toward my own set and which don't do anything horrible.
gollark: Nihilism would be "nothing matters" or something.
gollark: We *will* destroy all plants.
gollark: Orbital nature lasers are already warming up.
gollark: And this seems too vaguely defined to be useful if you can just handwave any issue which does not in fact run on something like "balance" as being caused by some other imbalance.

References

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