Multinational Finance Journal
© Global Business Publications. All rights reserved.
Quarterly publication of the Multinational Finance Society, a non-profit corporation ISSN 1096-1879
Volume 12, Numbers 1 & 2, March/June 2008
Are Forward Exchange Rates Rational Forecasts of Future
Spot Rates? An Improved Econometric Analysis for the Major Currencies
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2008, vol. 12, no. 1/2, pp. 1–20)
Raj Aggarwal
University of Akron, U.S.A.
Winston T. Lin
The State University of New York at Buffalo, U.S.A.
Sunil K. Mohanty
University of St. Thomas, Minneapolis, U.S.A.
It has been suggested that prior studies that have puzzlingly found forward
rates to be inefficient and biased forecasts of future spot rates may be limited
by inadequate statistical methodologies. Using an improved statistical
methodology that accounts for both non-stationarity and non-normality in
exchange rates, we unfortunately reconfirm that U.S. dollar forward rates for
horizons ranging from one to twelve months for the British pound, Japanese yen,
Swiss franc, and the German mark over the period 1973–1998 are generally not
efficient or rational forecasts of future spot rates. However, as one bright
spot, we cannot reject efficiency and rationality for the U.S. dollar forward
rate for the Canadian dollar (JEL: F31, G14, F47, G15).
Keywords: forward rates, rational forecasts.
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Firm Investments and Corporate Governance in Asian
Emerging Markets
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2008, vol. 12, no. 1/2, pp. 21–44)
Tanweer Hasan
Roosevelt University, U.S.A.
Palani-Rajan Kadapakkam
University of Texas at San Antonio, U.S.A.
P. C. Kumar
American University, U.S.A.
The quality of corporate governance has been shown to have wide-ranging
implications, e.g., on the performance of stock markets and on exchange rates.
This study investigates whether the quality of corporate governance in a country
impacts investment decisions made at the micro level of the firm. The study
focuses on Asian emerging markets since they have widely varying standards of
corporate governance. Based on eight measures of corporate governance, four
aggregate indices of corporate governance (business environment, legal
environment, investor rights, and an overall measure) are developed for seven
countries in the sample drawing on data from published sources. The results
indicate that improvements in corporate governance mitigate the dependency of
firm investments on their internal resources and facilitate access by firms to
capital markets (JEL: G15, G30, G31).
Keywords: corporate governance, firm investments, emerging markets,
investment-cashflow sensitivity.
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A Liquidity
Motivated Algorithm for Discerning Trade Direction
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2008, vol. 12, no. 1/2, pp. 45–66)
David Michayluk
University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Laurie Prather
Bond University, Australia
Most exchanges do not report trade direction thus researchers and traders must
deduce whether a trade is buyer or seller initiated since this information is
required to evaluate models of bid-ask spread components and to understand the
market for immediacy. Algorithms that assign trade direction based on the
proximity to bid or ask quotes are easily implemented but ignore information
readily discernable from orders, changes in the quoted depth and subsequent
price movements. Using the New York Stock Exchange Trades, Orders and Quotes
database, systematic biases in existing trade direction algorithms are
documented that can be rectified by recognizing that the impact on liquidity is
the fundamental characteristic underlying order placement. Although this
liquidity-based method is difficult to implement, it more closely captures the
actual behavior of market participants (JEL : G10, G14).
Keywords: liquidity, trade direction algorithm, TORQ database, order
placement
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Value-at-Risk for Greek Stocks
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2008, vol. 12, no. 1/2, pp. 67–105)
Timotheos Angelidis
University of Peloponnese, Greece
Alexandros Benos
National Bank of Greece, Greece
This paper analyses the application of several volatility models to forecast
daily Value-at-Risk (VaR) both for single assets and portfolios. We calculate
the VaR number for 4 Greek stocks, 2 portfolios based on these securities and
for the Athens Stock Exchange General Index. We model VaR for long and short
trading positions by employing non-parametric methods, such as historical and
filtered historical simulation, as well as parametric ones. Especially for the
later techniques we use a collection of ARCH models (GARCH, EGARCH and TARCH)
based on three distributional assumptions (Normal, Student-T and Skewed
Student-T), while we combine the Extreme Value Theory with a volatility updating
technique (via GARCH type-modeling). In order to choose one model among the
various forecasting methods, we employ a two-stage backtesting procedure. In the
first one, we implement two backtesting criteria (unconditional and conditional
coverage) to test the statistical accuracy of the models. In the second stage,
we employ standard forecast evaluation methods in order to examine whether any
differences between models that have converged are statistica lly significant (JEL:
C22; C52; C53; G15).
Keywords: value-at-risk, GARCH, historical simulation, backtesting.
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Equity Market Price Interactions Between China and the
Other Markets Within the Chinese States Equity Markets
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2008, vol. 12, no. 1/2, pp. 105–126)
Gary Gang Tian
University of Wollongong, Australia
This study examines the cointegrating and long-term causal relationships of
equity market prices in equity markets of Chinese states namely, Shanghai,
Shenzhen, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore. I cover the period between October 5,
1992 and March 20, 2006, taking into account both the Asian financial crisis and
the opening-up of China’s equity markets in recent years. First, I analysis the
cointegration by utilizing Johansen’s (1988) cointegration tests. I find that a
long-term equilibrium relationship measured by cointegration has been
established among Shanghai, Shenzhen, Hong Kong and Taiwanese markets and, to a
lesser degree, between these markets and the Singapore market since 1998.
Secondly, this study examines causality by exploring the bootstrapped
Toda-Yamamoto non-causality tests. I find that there is strong evidence of a
bi-directional causality between Shanghai and Shenzhen markets after 1998.
Furthermore, I also find that there are more causal linkages between the Chinese
states equity markets: two mainland Chinese markets, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and
Singapore became more dependent on each other. The robustness of the above
findings is confirmed by the use of a bootstrap test employed to test the
validity of my results.
Keywords: international financial markets; causality testing in VaRs with
bootstrapping, cointegration
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Higher-Order Terms in Bivariate Returns to
International Stock Market Indices
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2008, vol. 12, no. 1/2, pp. 127–155)
Kirt C. Butler
Michigan State University, U.S.A.
Katsushi Okada
Michigan State University, U.S.A.
This article documents the stochastic properties of bivariate returns to
international stock market indices. In particular, the article searches for the
best fit among a class of higher-order VARMA(u,v)-EGARCH(p,q) models with normal
errors and a constant conditional correlation using MSCI domestic and
world-ex-domestic index pairs for the Emu, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the
United States. Although a first-order VAR or VMA specification is sufficient to
accommodate the conditional means, second-order EGARCH terms are necessary in
two of the four bivariate series (JEL: G15 G11 C15 C34).
Keywords: higher-order, bivariate, international diversification, EGARCH,
VARMA.
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