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David E. Runkle

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  46
Citations -  12549

David E. Runkle is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bayesian vector autoregression & Economic forecasting. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 46 publications receiving 11803 citations. Previous affiliations of David E. Runkle include Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis & Brown University.

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On the Relation between the Expected Value and the Volatility of the Nominal Excess Return on Stocks

TL;DR: In this article, a modified GARCH-M model was used to find a negative relation between conditional expected monthly return and conditional variance of monthly return, using seasonal patterns in volatility and nominal interest rates to predict conditional variance.
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Size and performance of banking firms: Testing the predictions of theory

TL;DR: This article examined the economic functions of banks in environments in which agents are asymmetrically informed and considered the incentive effects (moral hazard) resulting from deposit insurance, and provided limited support for either set of theoretical predictions.
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Vector Autoregressions and Reality

TL;DR: In this paper, the statistical significance of variance decomposition and impulse response function for unrestricted vector autoregressions is examined and two methods of computing such confidence intervals are developed: first, using a normal approximation; second, using bootstrapped resampling.
Posted Content

Testing the Rationality of Price Forecasts: New Evidence from Panel Data

TL;DR: In this article, the rationality of individual price forecasts in a panel of professional forecasters was tested and the results showed that using individual forecasts avoids aggregation bias, comparison of forecasts to initial data avoids bias due to data revision, and a new covariance matrix estimator consistent when forecast errors are correlated across individuals is used.
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Liquidity constraints and the permanent-income hypothesis: Evidence from panel data

TL;DR: This article found no evidence of liquidity constraints and suggested that the failure of the permanent-income hypothesis in aggregate data may be due to aggregation bias, which may explain why some households are liquidity-constrained.