Different Results for Standard Errors of Identical Forecasts
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 1:19 pm
Hello,
When trying to replicate both a dynamic and static forecast and the associated standard errors from an existing equation, Eviews has not been reproducing the same standard errors, even though the forecast is the same as it was before. In fact, the newly calculated standard error for each forecast (both dynamic and static) is constant for all periods.
The equation I am using to forecast has two lagged independent variables and an MA(1) term. This strange result for standard errors only occurs when I forecast the LOG of the dependent variable, but forecasting the dependent variable itself doesn't give anything immediately strange (unfortunately, there is no corresponding earlier forecast of the non-logged series, so I do cannot determine whether the results I am getting now for that are strange or not).
There are other similar equations in the same workfile with similar strange results.
I am currently running the most up-to-date Eviews 7.2 (including 4/4/2012 patch). The workfile (and equations of interest) was initially created in 7.0, I believe with no updates applied. I asked a colleague running 7.0 to try to replicate these forecasts, and she successfully did so. She then upgraded her installation to the 7.2 (as of the 4/4/2012) and experienced the same issue that I described above (with the exact same strange results, at least).
I've attached a screenshot of the issue. The Workfile window has the relevant forecasts series highlighted to show that the command is the same with just a different output series name. The prefix "new_" was appended to the replications. The Equation window to the right is the equation from which I am trying to forecast. The two Group windows below (dynamic on the left, static on the right) have the following layout from left to right: original forecast, original SEs, new forecast, new SEs. The forecasts match while the SEs (which I've highlighted for clarity) do not.
Did we overlook something that may cause this type of result with the same forecasts with different standard errors? Please let me know whether I can provide more information or a clarification.
Many thanks!
Mickey
When trying to replicate both a dynamic and static forecast and the associated standard errors from an existing equation, Eviews has not been reproducing the same standard errors, even though the forecast is the same as it was before. In fact, the newly calculated standard error for each forecast (both dynamic and static) is constant for all periods.
The equation I am using to forecast has two lagged independent variables and an MA(1) term. This strange result for standard errors only occurs when I forecast the LOG of the dependent variable, but forecasting the dependent variable itself doesn't give anything immediately strange (unfortunately, there is no corresponding earlier forecast of the non-logged series, so I do cannot determine whether the results I am getting now for that are strange or not).
There are other similar equations in the same workfile with similar strange results.
I am currently running the most up-to-date Eviews 7.2 (including 4/4/2012 patch). The workfile (and equations of interest) was initially created in 7.0, I believe with no updates applied. I asked a colleague running 7.0 to try to replicate these forecasts, and she successfully did so. She then upgraded her installation to the 7.2 (as of the 4/4/2012) and experienced the same issue that I described above (with the exact same strange results, at least).
I've attached a screenshot of the issue. The Workfile window has the relevant forecasts series highlighted to show that the command is the same with just a different output series name. The prefix "new_" was appended to the replications. The Equation window to the right is the equation from which I am trying to forecast. The two Group windows below (dynamic on the left, static on the right) have the following layout from left to right: original forecast, original SEs, new forecast, new SEs. The forecasts match while the SEs (which I've highlighted for clarity) do not.
Did we overlook something that may cause this type of result with the same forecasts with different standard errors? Please let me know whether I can provide more information or a clarification.
Many thanks!
Mickey