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Foreign exchange market

About: Foreign exchange market is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 6661 publications have been published within this topic receiving 153384 citations. The topic is also known as: forex & FX.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results from the time-varying spillover model show that "The B&R" system spillover index reflects some sudden regional crises and the spillover of RMB exchange rate is affected by internal financial reforms as well as external economic shocks.

37 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors developed a theory of bid-ask quotes provided by foreign exchange dealers in the interbank market based on their beliefs and their inventory positions, and built an agent-based model of the inter-dealer market where dealers learn in a Bayesian manner from quotes from other dealers.

37 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: The impact of economic crisis on India has been analysed in the speech as discussed by the authors, where the authors presented the Symposium on "The Global Economic Crisis and Challenges for the Asian Economy in a Changing World".
Abstract: The impact of economic crisis on India has been analysed in the speech. [Speech delivered at the Symposium on 'The Global Economic Crisis and Challenges for the Asian Economy in a Changing World'].

37 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: The authors provides a broad and critical survey on the recent literature as well as a general understanding on the topic through reviewing the related literature on developed economies where recent methodological advances in time series econometrics have provided favorable results, questioning the previously documented uncovered interest parity puzzle.
Abstract: Financial account liberalizations since the second half of the 1980s paved way for the burgeoning literature that investigates foreign exchange market e‐ciency in emerging markets via testing for the uncovered interest parity (UIP) condition. This paper provides a broad and critical survey on this recent literature as well as a general understanding on the topic through reviewing the related literature on developed economies where recent methodological advances in time series econometrics have provided favorable results, questioning the previously documented UIP puzzle. The literature on emerging markets suggests that these countries deserve a special treatment by taking into account the existence of additional types of risk premia, high in∞ation episodes, flnancial contagion, peso problem, simultaneity problem, asymmetricity, and the determination of de facto structural breaks.

37 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors generalize the Engel and West hypothesis to the larger class of open economy dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models and show that all the predictions of the standard PVM carry over to the DSGE PVM.
Abstract: Working Paper 2008-16 June 2008 Abstract: Exchange rates have raised the ire of economists for more than twenty years. The problem is that few, if any, exchange rate models are known to systematically beat a naive random walk in out-of-sample forecasts. Engel and West (2005) show that these failures can be explained by the standard present value model (PVM) because it predicts random walk exchange rate dynamics if the discount factor approaches one and fundamentals have a unit root. This paper generalizes the Engel and West hypothesis to the larger class of open economy dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models. The Engel and West hypothesis is shown to hold for a canonical open economy DSGE model. We show that all the predictions of the standard PVM carry over to the DSGE PVM. The DSGE PVM also yields unobserved components (UC) models that we estimate using Bayesian methods and a quarterly Canadian-U.S. sample. Bayesian model evaluation reveals that the data support a UC model that calibrates the discount factor to one, implying the Canadian dollar-U.S, dollar exchange rate is a random walk dominated by permanent cross-country monetary and productivity shocks. JEL classification: E31, E37, F41 Key words: exchange rates, present value model and fundamentals, random walk, DSGE model, unobserved components model, Bayesian model comparison 1. INTRODUCTION The search for satisfactory exchange rate models continues to be elusive. This paper studies a workhorse theory of currency market equilibrium determination, the present-value model (PVM) of exchange rates, in the spirit of Engel and West (2005). Starting with the PVM and using uncontroversial assumptions about fundamentals and the discount factor, Engel and West (EW) hypothesize that the PVM generates an approximate random walk in exchange rates if the PVM discount factor approaches one and fundamentals are I(1). An important implication of the EW hypothesis is that fundamentals have no power to forecast future exchange rates, even with the PVM dictating equilibrium in the currency market. EW support their hypothesis with a key theorem and empirical and simulation evidence. This paper complements Engel and West (2005) by generalizing their main hypothesis in two ways. First, the EW hypothesis is generalized using a canonical two-country monetary dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model. Its linearized uncovered interest parity (UIP) and money demand equations yield the DSGE-PVM that coincides with the standard PVM of the exchange rate. Second, we show the standard- and DSGE-PVMs make equivalent predictions for exchange rates. The predictions are summarized in five propositions: (1) the exchange rate and fundamental cointegrate [Campbell and Shiller (1987)], (2) the PVM yields an error correction model (ECM) for currency returns in which the lagged cointegrating relation is the only regressor, (3) the PVM predicts a limiting economy (Le., the PVM discount factor approaches one from below) in which the exchange rate is a martingale, (4) given fundamental growth depends only on the lagged cointegrating relation, the exchange rate and fundamental have a common trend-common cycle decomposition [Vahid and Engle (1993)], and (5) the EW hypothesis is also satisfied when the exchange rate and fundamental share a common feature and the PVM discount factor approaches one. A corollary to (5) is that the exchange rate is unpredictable when the PVM discount factor goes to one. We report evidence from vector autoregression (VARs) about the propositions using quarterly floating rate Canadian-, Japanese-, and U.K.-U.S. samples. The VAR evidence rejects cointegration and reveals substantial serial correlation for the exchange rate and the fundamental. There is also evidence that a common feature exists between the Canadian dollar-, Yen-, and Pound-U.S. dollar exchange rates and the relevant fundamentals. …

37 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023158
2022202
2021157
2020171
2019209
2018198