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Banking Essentials - Part I

This pathway will walk us through the basics of banks, starting with some of the different types and their main functions, then starting to look at the regulation faced by the banks, both before and after the Global Financial Crisis.

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Greenwashing is the act of distributing false information about something being more environmentally friendly than it actually is.

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In this video, Max discusses the cost-of-living crisis currently enveloping the UK. He examines its impact on households as well as the overall economy.

CSR and Sustainability in Financial Services

In the first video of this two-part video series, Elisa introduces us to sustainability. She begins by looking at the difference between sustainability and corporate social responsibility, two terms that can be easily confused.

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What is Covariance?

What is Covariance?

Abdulla Javeri

30 years: Financial markets trader

This is the first of a series of videos that examine the relationship between two assets. There are three basic measures that are usually used - this video pertains to covariance. Abdulla explains this method by using an example and outlining the formula.

This is the first of a series of videos that examine the relationship between two assets. There are three basic measures that are usually used - this video pertains to covariance. Abdulla explains this method by using an example and outlining the formula.

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What is Covariance?

4 mins 40 secs

Overview

Covariance measures the directional relationship between two assets. When calculated, it can help determine how one asset moves in relation to another.

Key learning objectives:

  • Understand and learn how to calculate covariance

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Summary

What is covariance?

The first thing we need to do is find the average daily return for two different assets, that’s x-mean and y-mean. Next, for each data point subtract the mean from the actual return for both x and y.  Then, multiply the two and repeat for each data point and add up all those products. Finally, divide by n, if you consider the data to be the entire population, or n minus one if you consider the data set as being a sample from a larger set of data. That’s the covariance. The result will be either a positive number or a negative number and it’s the sign that’s important.

Cov(xy) = Σ (X - Xmean) (Y - Ymean)/n

n - 1 for sample

What is the significance of covariance?

  • A positive covariance means that they tend to go up and down at the same time, but not always.
  • A negative covariance means that they tend to move in opposite directions, but not always.

The magnitude of the number is not important. If prices were used as inputs, one asset might have a high price, the other a low one, or both might have high prices. The resulting number will be dependent on the size of the inputs and therefore not relevant or useful.

What are the limitations of covariance?

The main drawback with covariance is that it gives us a binary result, positive or negative. It doesn’t allow us to identify the area where, in reality, we would consider the relationship to be weak or non-existent. It doesn't tell us anything about the strength of that relationship. We leave that to correlation, and covariance is a stepping stone to correlation. Nor does it tell us anything about the size of the relationship, by that we mean if gold moves by 1%, by how much would we expect the Euro-Dollar rate to move. We leave that to linear regression.

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Abdulla Javeri

Abdulla Javeri

Abdulla’s career in the financial markets started in 1990 when he entered the trading floor of the London International Financial Futures Exchange, LIFFE, and qualified as a pit trader in equity and equity index options. In 1996, Abdulla became a trainer for regulatory qualifications and then for non-exam courses, primarily covering all major financial products.

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