This paper tests for the relationship between excess returns and economic growth rates in the U.S., using a Seemingly Unrelated Regression (SUR) approach. The system includes monthly data for inflation, consumption, narrow money supply and personal disposable income and each equation has up to 24-lagged Autoregressive terms. After removing the four major shocks associated with Black Monday, the Asian Crisis, “9·11” and its anniversary, we cannot find any ARCH behaviour in either the excess returns or the money series. The models are reduced to their parsimonious forms and the inflation and real consumption equations are corrected for ARCH. To make the result more robust we reduce our system to four equations by conditioning on income ...
This dissertation consists of three papers. The first paper studies the comovement between returns t...
We examine whether the stock market return is predictable from a range of financial indicators and m...
This paper revisits the relationships among macroeconomic variables and asset returns. Based on rece...
This paper investigates the causal relations and dynamic interactions among the different sizes of s...
Using the informational sufficiency procedure from Forni and Gambetti (2014) along with data from Mc...
Stock market, interest rate and output: a model and estimation for US time series dat
This thesis concludes that aggregate stock market prices are significantly linked to the real econom...
This dissertation studies two important stock market anomalies, the correlation between stock return...
This dissertation has explored the relationship between stock return and macroeconomic factors, in t...
This article examines the long run relationship between economic growth and stock prices for Canada ...
In this paper we reexamine the linkages between output growth and real stock price changes for the G...
Using monthly data from seven mature and emerging markets and a battery of GARCH and EGARCH models, ...
This dissertation investigates, both theoretically and empirically, how does the macroeconomic volat...
This paper brings together two separate and important topics in finance: the predictability of aggr...
Granger (1969) causality tests and Sims\u27 (1980) innovation accounting are used to explain fluctua...
This dissertation consists of three papers. The first paper studies the comovement between returns t...
We examine whether the stock market return is predictable from a range of financial indicators and m...
This paper revisits the relationships among macroeconomic variables and asset returns. Based on rece...
This paper investigates the causal relations and dynamic interactions among the different sizes of s...
Using the informational sufficiency procedure from Forni and Gambetti (2014) along with data from Mc...
Stock market, interest rate and output: a model and estimation for US time series dat
This thesis concludes that aggregate stock market prices are significantly linked to the real econom...
This dissertation studies two important stock market anomalies, the correlation between stock return...
This dissertation has explored the relationship between stock return and macroeconomic factors, in t...
This article examines the long run relationship between economic growth and stock prices for Canada ...
In this paper we reexamine the linkages between output growth and real stock price changes for the G...
Using monthly data from seven mature and emerging markets and a battery of GARCH and EGARCH models, ...
This dissertation investigates, both theoretically and empirically, how does the macroeconomic volat...
This paper brings together two separate and important topics in finance: the predictability of aggr...
Granger (1969) causality tests and Sims\u27 (1980) innovation accounting are used to explain fluctua...
This dissertation consists of three papers. The first paper studies the comovement between returns t...
We examine whether the stock market return is predictable from a range of financial indicators and m...
This paper revisits the relationships among macroeconomic variables and asset returns. Based on rece...