No, I have not gone into seclusion. Well actually I have, but not intentionally and certainly not for lack of interest in the blog. Just the usual crazy time of year, only worse this year for some reason. Anyway I'll be back very soon, with lots to say! But here's something important and timely, so it can't wait:
Journal of Financial Econometrics
Call for Papers
Special Issue in Honor of Peter Christoffersen
The Journal of Financial Econometrics is organizing a special issue in memory of Professor Peter
Christoffersen, our friend and colleague, who passed away in June 2018. Peter held the TMX Chair in Capital Markets and a Bank of Canada Fellowship and was a widely respected member of the Rotman School at the University of Toronto since 2010. Prior to 2010, Peter was a valued member of the Desautels Faculty of Management at McGill University. In addition to his transformative work in econometrics and volatility models, financial risk and financial innovation had been the focus of Peter’s work in recent years.
We invite paper submissions on topics related to Peter’s contributions to Finance and Econometrics. We are particularly interested in papers related to the following topics:
1) The use of option-implied information for forecasting; Rare disasters and portfolio
management; Factor structures in derivatives and futures markets.
2) Volatility, correlation, extreme events, systemic risk and Value-at-Risk modeling for
financial market risk management.
3) The econometrics of digital assets; Big data and Machine Learning.
To submit a paper, authors should login to the Journal of Financial Econometrics online submission system and follow the submission instructions as per journal policy. The due date for submissions is June 30, 2019. It is important to specify in the cover letter that the paper is submitted to the special issue in honor of Peter Christoffersen, otherwise your paper will not be assigned to the guest editors.
Guest Editors
• Francis X. Diebold, University of Pennsylvania
• René Garcia, Université de Montréal and Toulouse School of Economics
• Kris Jacobs, University of Houston
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