LGMar 16

GARCH-FIS: A Hybrid Forecasting Model with Dynamic Volatility-Driven Parameter Adaptation

arXiv:2603.147931.1h-index: 1
Predicted impact top 99% in LG · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses forecasting challenges for financial analysts by offering an incremental improvement with dynamic parameter adaptation in a hybrid model.

The paper tackled the problem of multi-step forecasting for financial time series by proposing a hybrid GARCH-FIS model that dynamically adapts parameters based on volatility, resulting in significantly outperforming benchmarks like SVR, LSTM, and ARIMA-GARCH in predictive accuracy and stability.

This paper proposes a novel hybrid model, termed GARCH-FIS, for recursive rolling multi-step forecasting of financial time series. It integrates a Fuzzy Inference System (FIS) with a Generalized Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity (GARCH) model to jointly address nonlinear dynamics and time-varying volatility. The core innovation is a dynamic parameter adaptation mechanism for the FIS, specifically activated within the multi-step forecasting cycle. In this process, the conditional volatility estimated by a rolling window GARCH model is continuously translated into a price volatility measure. At each forecasting step, this measure, alongside the updated mean of the sliding window data -- which now incorporates the most recent predicted price -- jointly determines the parameters of the FIS membership functions for the next prediction. Consequently, the granularity of the fuzzy inference adapts as the forecast horizon extends: membership functions are automatically widened during high-volatility market regimes to bolster robustness and narrowed during stable periods to enhance precision. This constitutes a fundamental advancement over a static one-step-ahead prediction setup. Furthermore, the model's fuzzy rule base is automatically constructed from data using the Wang-Mendel method, promoting interpretability and adaptability. Empirical evaluation, focused exclusively on multi-step forecasting performance across ten diverse financial assets, demonstrates that the proposed GARCH-FIS model significantly outperforms benchmark models -- including Support Vector Regression(SVR), Long Short-Term Memory networks(LSTM), and an ARIMA-GARCH econometric model -- in terms of predictive accuracy and stability, while effectively mitigating error accumulation in extended recursive forecasts.

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