scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A Consumption-Based Model of the Term Structure of Interest Rates

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
This paper proposed a consumption-based model that can account for many features of the nominal term structure of interest rates, such as a time-varying price of risk generated by external habit.
Abstract
This paper proposes a consumption-based model that can account for many features of the nominal term structure of interest rates. The driving force behind the model is a time-varying price of risk generated by external habit. Nominal bonds depend on past consumption growth through habit and on expected inflation. When calibrated data on consumption, inflation, and the average level of bond yields, the model produces realistic volatility of bond yields and can explain key aspects of the expectations puzzle documented by Campbell and Shiller (1991) and Fama and Bliss (1987). When Actual consumption and inflation data are fed into the model, the model is shown to account for many of the short and long-run fluctuations in the short-term interest rate and the yield spread. At the same time, the model captures the high equity premium and excess stock market volatility.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

"2-:)67-8=3*)227=0:%2-%"2-:)67-8=3*)227=0:%2-%
',30%60=311327 ',30%60=311327
-2%2')%4)67 #,%6832%'908=)7)%6',

3279148-32%7)(3()03*8,)!)61 869'896)3*28)6)783279148-32%7)(3()03*8,)!)61 869'896)3*28)6)78
%8)7%8)7
)77-'%#%',8)6
"2-:)67-8=3*)227=0:%2-%
3003;8,-7%2(%((-8-32%0;36/7%8,88476)437-836=94)22)(9*2')$4%4)67
%683*8,)-2%2')311327%2(8,)-2%2')%2(-2%2'-%0%2%+)1)28311327
)'311)2()(-8%8-32)'311)2()(-8%8-32
#%',8)63279148-32%7)(3()03*8,)!)61 869'896)3*28)6)78%8)7
3962%03*
-2%2'-%0'3231-'7

,884(<(3-36+..@2)'3
!,-74%4)6-74378)(%8 ',30%60=311327,88476)437-836=94)22)(9*2')$4%4)67
36136)-2*361%8-3240)%7)'328%'86)437-836=43&3<94)22)(9

3279148-32%7)(3()03*8,)!)61 869'896)3*28)6)78%8)73279148-32%7)(3()03*8,)!)61 869'896)3*28)6)78%8)7
&786%'8&786%'8
!,-74%4)6463437)7%'3279148-32&%7)(13()08,%8%''39287*361%2=*)%896)73*8,)231-2%08)61
7869'896)3*-28)6)786%8)7!,)(6-:-2+*36')&),-2(8,)13()0-7%8-1):%6=-2+46-')3*6-7/+)2)6%8)(&=
)<8)62%0,%&-831-2%0&32(7()4)2(324%78'3279148-32+63;8,8,639+,,%&-8%2(32)<4)'8)(
-2A%8-32#,)2'%0-&6%8)(83(%8%32'3279148-32-2A%8-32%2(8,)%++6)+%8)1%6/)88,)13()0
463(9')76)%0-78-'1)%27%2(:30%8-0-8-)73*&32(=-)0(7%2(%''39287*368,))<4)'8%8-32749>>0)!,)
13()0%073'%4896)78,),-+,)59-8=46)1-91%2()<')77783'/1%6/)8:30%8-0-8=
-7'-40-2)7-7'-40-2)7
-2%2')?-2%2')%2(-2%2'-%0%2%+)1)28
!,-7.3962%0%68-'0)-7%:%-0%&0)%8 ',30%60=311327,88476)437-836=94)22)(9*2')$4%4)67

The Rodney L. White Center for Financial Research
A Consumption-Based Model of the
Term Structure of Interest Rates
Jessica A. Wachter
27-04

A Consumption-Based Model of the Term Structure
of Interest Rates
Jessica A. Wachter
University of Pennsylvania and NBER
July 9, 2004
I thank Andrew Ang, Ravi Bansal, Michael Brandt, Geert Bekaert, John Campbell, John Cochrane,
Francisco Gomes, Vassil Konstantinov, Martin Lettau, Anthony Lynch, David Marshall, Lasse Pederson,
Andre Perold, Ken Singleton, Christopher Telmer, Jeremy Stein, Matt Richardson, Stephen Ross, Robert
Whitelaw, Yihong Xia, seminar participants at the 2004 Western Finance Association meeting in Vancouver,
the 2003 Society of Economic Dynamics meeting in Paris, and the 2001 NBER Asset Pricing meeting in
Los Angeles, the the NYU Macro lunch, the New York Federal Reserve, Washington University, and the
Wharton School. I thank Lehman Brothers for financial support.
Address: The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, 3620 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104;
Tel: (215) 898-7634; Email: jwachter@wharton.upenn.edu; http://finance.wharton.upenn.edu/˜ jwachter/

A Consumption-Based Model of the Term Structure
of Interest Rates
Abstract
This paper proposes a consumption-based model that can account for many features of the
nominal term structure of interest rates. The driving force behind the model is a time-varying
price of risk generated by external habit. Nominal bonds depend on past consumption growth
through habit and on expected inflation. When calibrated to data on consumption, inflation, and
the average level of bond yields, the model produces realistic volatility of bond yields and can
explain key aspects of the expectations puzzle documented by Campbell and Shiller (1991) and
Fama and Bliss (1987). When actual consumption and inflation data are fed into the model, the
model is shown to account for many of the short and long-run fluctuations in the short-term interest
rate and the yield spread. At the same time, the model captures the high equity premium and
excess stock market volatility.

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Macro Factors in Bond Risk Premia

TL;DR: This article investigated the relationship between forecastable variation in excess bond returns and macroeconomic fundamentals and found that "real" and "inflation" factors have important forecasting power for future excess returns on U.S. government bonds, above and beyond the predictive power contained in forward rates and yield spreads.
Journal ArticleDOI

Variable Rare Disasters: An Exactly Solved Framework for Ten Puzzles in Macro-Finance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors incorporate a time-varying intensity of disasters in the Rietz-Barro hypothesis that risk premia result from the possibility of rare, large disasters.
Posted Content

The Determinants of Stock and Bond Return Comovements

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the economic factors employing structural and non-structural vector autoregressive models for economic state variables such as interest rates, (expected) inflation, output growth and dividend payouts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk Premiums in Dynamic Term Structure Models with Unspanned Macro Risks

TL;DR: This article quantified how variation in real economic activity and ination in the U.S. Treasury market inuenced the market prices of level, slope, and curvature risks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Term Premia and Inflation Uncertainty: Empirical Evidence from an International Panel Dataset

TL;DR: This paper constructed a panel of zero-coupon nominal government bond yields spanning ten industrialized countries and nearly two decades and computed forward rates and then used two different methods to decompose these forward rates into expected future short-term interest rates and term premiums.
References
More filters
ReportDOI

The Dividend-Price Ratio and Expectations of Future Dividends and Discount Factors

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a linearized model to evaluate the importance of real dividend growth, measured real discount rates, and unexplained factors in determining the dividend-price ratio for U.S. time series 1871-1986 and 1926-1986.
Journal ArticleDOI

A yield-factor model of interest rates

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a consistent and arbitrage-free multifactor model of the term structure of interest rates in which yields at selected fixed maturities follow a parametric muitivariate Markov diffusion process with stochastic volatility.
Journal ArticleDOI

Habit Formation: A Resolution of the Equity Premium Puzzle

TL;DR: In the context of an economy with rational expectations, Mehra and Prescott as discussed by the authors showed that the problem of the equity premium puzzle can be solved by relaxing the time separability of von Neumann-Morgenstern preferences to allow for adjacent complementarity in consumption.
Posted Content

Asset Prices Under Habit Formation and Catching Up with the Joneses

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce a utility function that nests three classes of utility functions: (1) time-separable utility functions, (2) "catching up with the Joneses" utility functions that depend on the consumer's level of consumption relative to the lagged cross-sectional average level, and (3) utility functions displaying habit formation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consumption, Aggregate Wealth, and Expected Stock Returns

TL;DR: In this article, the role of f luctuations in the aggregate consumption-wealth ratio for predicting stock returns was studied using U.S. quarterly stock market data, and it was shown that these fluctuations in the consumption-aggregate wealth ratio are strong predictors of both real stock returns and excess returns over a Treasury bill rate.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (1)
Q1. What are the contributions in "A consumption-based model of the term structure of interest rates" ?

This paper proposes a consumption-based model that can account for many features of the nominal term structure of interest rates.