We analyse the time series properties of the S&P500 dividend–price ratio in the light of long-memory, structural breaks and rational bubbles. We find an increase in the long-memory parameter in the early 1990s by applying a test recently proposed by Sibbertsen and Kruse [J. Time Series Anal., 2009, 30, 263–285]. An application of the unit root test against long memory of Demetrescu et al. [Econometr. Theory, 2008, 24, 176–215] suggests that the prebreak data can be characterized by long memory, while the post-break sample contains a unit root. These results reconcile two empirical findings that are seen as contradictory: on the one hand, they confirm the existence of fractional integration in the S&P500 log-dividend–price ratio and, on the ...
This paper employs a combination of unit root tests and fractional integration technique to test for...
Unlike equity returns, many fixed-income return measures appear to display long memory. We show that...
Abstract: It is now recognized that long memory and structural change can easily be confused because...
We analyse the time series properties of the S&P500 dividend–price ratio in the light of long-memory...
We analyse the time series properties of the S&P500 dividend–price ratio in the light of long-memory...
In this article we provide evidence for a rational bubble in S\&P 500 stock prices by applying a tes...
This study investigates changes in the persistence of the S&P Composite dividend-price ratio. Recent...
We test for long memory in 3- and 6-month daily returns series on Eurocurrency deposits denominated ...
This paper presents new results on the rational bubbles hypothesis for a panel of 18 OECD countries ...
This paper reports empirical tests for the existence of rational bubbles in stock prices. The analys...
This thesis contains three essays on spurious long memory with an introduction to the literature in ...
Unlike equity returns, many fixed-income return and volatility measures appear to display long memor...
Certain “spurious long memory” processes mimic the behavior of fractional integration in that the va...
In an interesting paper Diebold and Senhadji (1996) showed that U.S. GNP data was not as uniformativ...
tests for rational bubbles. They argued that if stock prices are not more explosive than dividends, ...
This paper employs a combination of unit root tests and fractional integration technique to test for...
Unlike equity returns, many fixed-income return measures appear to display long memory. We show that...
Abstract: It is now recognized that long memory and structural change can easily be confused because...
We analyse the time series properties of the S&P500 dividend–price ratio in the light of long-memory...
We analyse the time series properties of the S&P500 dividend–price ratio in the light of long-memory...
In this article we provide evidence for a rational bubble in S\&P 500 stock prices by applying a tes...
This study investigates changes in the persistence of the S&P Composite dividend-price ratio. Recent...
We test for long memory in 3- and 6-month daily returns series on Eurocurrency deposits denominated ...
This paper presents new results on the rational bubbles hypothesis for a panel of 18 OECD countries ...
This paper reports empirical tests for the existence of rational bubbles in stock prices. The analys...
This thesis contains three essays on spurious long memory with an introduction to the literature in ...
Unlike equity returns, many fixed-income return and volatility measures appear to display long memor...
Certain “spurious long memory” processes mimic the behavior of fractional integration in that the va...
In an interesting paper Diebold and Senhadji (1996) showed that U.S. GNP data was not as uniformativ...
tests for rational bubbles. They argued that if stock prices are not more explosive than dividends, ...
This paper employs a combination of unit root tests and fractional integration technique to test for...
Unlike equity returns, many fixed-income return measures appear to display long memory. We show that...
Abstract: It is now recognized that long memory and structural change can easily be confused because...