Predictability in international asset returns: a reexamination
Christopher Neely and
Paul A. Weller
No 1997-010, Working Papers from Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Abstract:
This paper argues that inferring long-horizon asset-return predictability from the properties of vector autoregressive (VAR) models on relatively short spans of data is potentially unreliable. We illustrate the problems that can arise by re-examining the findings of Bekaert and Hodrick (1992), who detected evidence of in-sample predictability in international equity and foreign exchange markets using VAR methodology for a variety of countries over the period 1981-1989. The VAR predictions are significantly biased in most out-of-sample forecasts and are conclusively outperformed by a simple benchmark model at horizons of up to six months. This remains true even after corrections for small sample bias and the introduction of Bayesian parameter restrictions. A Monte Carlo analysis indicates that the data are unlikely to have been generated by a stable VAR. This conclusion is supported by an examination of structural break statistics. Implied long-horizon statistics calculated from the VAR parameter estimates are shown to be very unreliable.
Keywords: Econometric models; Foreign exchange; Forecasting (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1999
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (9)
Published in Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, December 2000, 35-(4), pp. 601-20
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Journal Article: Predictability in International Asset Returns: A Reexamination (2000) 
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