4.4 Article

Optimal estimation of a large-dimensional covariance matrix under Stein's loss

Journal

BERNOULLI
Volume 24, Issue 4B, Pages 3791-3832

Publisher

INT STATISTICAL INST
DOI: 10.3150/17-BEJ979

Keywords

large-dimensional asymptotics; nonlinear shrinkage estimation; random matrix theory; rotation equivariance; Stein's loss

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This paper introduces a new method for deriving covariance matrix estimators that are decision-theoretically optimal within a class of nonlinear shrinkage estimators. The key is to employ large-dimensional asymptotics: the matrix dimension and the sample size go to infinity together, with their ratio converging to a finite, nonzero limit. As the main focus, we apply this method to Stein's loss. Compared to the estimator of Stein (Estimation of a covariance matrix (1975); J. Math. Sci. 34 (1986) 1373-1403), ours has five theoretical advantages: (1) it asymptotically minimizes the loss itself, instead of an estimator of the expected loss; (2) it does not necessitate post-processing via an ad hoc algorithm (called isotonization) to restore the positivity or the ordering of the covariance matrix eigenvalues; (3) it does not ignore any terms in the function to be minimized; (4) it does not require normality; and (5) it is not limited to applications where the sample size exceeds the dimension. In addition to these theoretical advantages, our estimator also improves upon Stein's estimator in terms of finite-sample performance, as evidenced via extensive Monte Carlo simulations. To further demonstrate the effectiveness of our method, we show that some previously suggested estimators of the covariance matrix and its inverse are decision-theoretically optimal in the large-dimensional asymptotic limit with respect to the Frobenius loss function.

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