It is a well-documented fact that changes in exchange rates are very difficult to explain using macroeconomic fundamentals such as, money supply, real income, interest rate, trade balance and bond supply. Forecasting models based on macroeconomic variables, tend to do no better than a random walk model in out-of-sample exercises. This phenomenon is known as the Meese and Rogoff puzzle. We re-examine this puzzle by employing commodity prices as an alternative variable. We find that changes in commodity prices have power in explaining fluctuations in commodity currency exchange rates both in-sample and out-of-sample. This relationship is linear in nature and strongest at the daily frequency. The relationship is present for all four s...
This paper provides new evidence on the role of exchange rates in forecasting commodity prices. Cons...
This paper provides new evidence on the role of exchange rates in forecasting commodity prices. Cons...
Commodity price booms, as those recorded in the last decade, may have a signifi-cant economic impact...
This paper demonstrates that "commodity currency" exchange rates have remarkably robust power in pre...
The “commodity currency ” literature highlights the robust exchange rate response to fluctuations in...
This paper examines whether the real exchange rates of commodity-exporting developing countries move...
This paper re-examines empirical exchange rate puzzles by focusing on three OECD economies (Australi...
Abstract. We show that "commodity currency " exchange rates have remarkably robust power i...
This paper examines common forces driving the prices of 51 highly tradable commodities. We demonstr...
Chen et al. (2010) report that for ‘commodity currencies’, the exchange rate predicts the country’s ...
Abstract: This paper addresses the purchasing power parity (PPP) puzzle for commodity currencies. A...
This paper revisits the exchange rate-fundamentals debate for the case of the South African Rand; em...
This note provides an update to the relationship between "commodity currency " exchange ra...
Understanding and measuring the relative roles of different causal channels between commodity prices...
Commodity price fluctuations have been troublesome in their destabilising effects on the foreign exc...
This paper provides new evidence on the role of exchange rates in forecasting commodity prices. Cons...
This paper provides new evidence on the role of exchange rates in forecasting commodity prices. Cons...
Commodity price booms, as those recorded in the last decade, may have a signifi-cant economic impact...
This paper demonstrates that "commodity currency" exchange rates have remarkably robust power in pre...
The “commodity currency ” literature highlights the robust exchange rate response to fluctuations in...
This paper examines whether the real exchange rates of commodity-exporting developing countries move...
This paper re-examines empirical exchange rate puzzles by focusing on three OECD economies (Australi...
Abstract. We show that "commodity currency " exchange rates have remarkably robust power i...
This paper examines common forces driving the prices of 51 highly tradable commodities. We demonstr...
Chen et al. (2010) report that for ‘commodity currencies’, the exchange rate predicts the country’s ...
Abstract: This paper addresses the purchasing power parity (PPP) puzzle for commodity currencies. A...
This paper revisits the exchange rate-fundamentals debate for the case of the South African Rand; em...
This note provides an update to the relationship between "commodity currency " exchange ra...
Understanding and measuring the relative roles of different causal channels between commodity prices...
Commodity price fluctuations have been troublesome in their destabilising effects on the foreign exc...
This paper provides new evidence on the role of exchange rates in forecasting commodity prices. Cons...
This paper provides new evidence on the role of exchange rates in forecasting commodity prices. Cons...
Commodity price booms, as those recorded in the last decade, may have a signifi-cant economic impact...