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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.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined whether stock market and foreign exchange markets are related to each other or not and used Granger's Causality test and Vector Auto Regression technique.
Abstract: This article attempts to examine whether stock market and foreign exchange markets are related to each other or not. The study uses Granger’s Causality test and Vector Auto Regression technique on ...

151 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report evidence on the profitability and statistical significance among 2,127 technical trading rules and find that the best rules are significantly profitable based on standard tests and that data-snooping biases do not change the basic conclusions for the full sample.
Abstract: We report evidence on the profitability and statistical significance among 2,127 technical trading rules. The best rules are found to be significantly profitable based on standard tests. We then employ White’s (2000) Reality Check to evaluate these rules and find that data-snooping biases do not change the basic conclusions for the full sample. A sub-sample analysis indicates that the data-snooping problem is more serious in the second half of the sample. Profitability becomes much weaker in the more recent period, suggesting that the foreign exchange market becomes more efficient over time. Evidence from cross exchange rates confirms the basic findings.

150 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the single-beta capital asset pricing model for the pricing of forward foreign exchange contracts from the point of view of a U.S. investor is proposed, and the results show significant time variation for the betas and tests of the over-identifying restrictions are generally favorable to the model.

149 citations

ReportDOI
TL;DR: A country that has substantial international liquidity (large foreign exchange reserves and a ready source of foreign currency loans) is less likely to be the object of a currency attack as mentioned in this paper, which is the key to self-protection.
Abstract: International economic crises will continue to occur in the future as they have for centuries past. The rapid spread of the 1997 crisis in Asia and of the 1982 crisis in Latin America showed how shifts in market perceptions can suddenly bring trouble to countries even when there has been no change in objective conditions. More recently, the sharp jump in emerging market interest rates after Russia's August 1998 default underlined the vulnerability of all emerging market economies to increases in investors' aversion to risk. Emerging market countries that want to avoid the devastating effects of such crises must protect themselves. They cannot depend on the International Monetary Fund or other international organizations nor expect that a new global financial architecture' will make the world economy less dangerous. Taking steps to protect themselves requires more than avoiding those bad policies that make a currency crisis inevitable. The process of contagion makes even the virtuous vulnerable to currency runs. Liquidity is the key to self-protection. A country that has substantial international liquidity -- large foreign exchange reserves and a ready source of foreign currency loans -- is less likely to be the object of a currency attack. Substantial liquidity also permits a country that is attacked from within or without to defend itself better and to make more orderly adjustments. The challenge is to find ways to increase liquidity at reasonable cost.

149 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: The authors survey the empirical literature on floating nominal exchange rates over the past decade and conclude that the observed difference in exchange rate and macroeconomic volatility under different nominal exchange rate regimes makes them skeptical of the first view.
Abstract: We survey the empirical literature on floating nominal exchange rates over the past decade. Exchange rates are difficult to forecast at short- to medium-term horizons. There is a bit of explanatory power to monetary models such as the Dornbusch "overshooting" theory, in the form of reaction to "news" and in forecasts at long-run horizons. Nevertheless, at short horizons, a driftless random walk characterizes exchange rates better than standard models based on observable macroeconomic fundamentals. Unexplained large shocks to floating rates must then, logically, be due either to innovations in unobservable fundamentals, or to non-fundamental factors such as speculative bubbles. The observed difference in exchange rate and macroeconomic volatility under different nominal exchange rate regimes makes us skeptical of the first view. The theory and evidence on speculative bubbles, however, is not conclusive. We conclude with the hope that promising new studies of the microstructure of the foreign exchange market might eventually rise to insights into these phenomena.

149 citations


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