The Empirical Evidence on the Efficiency of Forward and Futures Foreign Exchange Markets: Volume 24 in Fundamentals of Pure and Applied Economics
© Harwood,
1987
Publication type: Book
Research Archive Topic: Business Economics and Public Policy, Corporate Finance, World Business
Abstract
Written for graduate students, researchers and professionals in international finance and academia, this book provides a useful foundation for future research in developing quantitative measures of risk and expected return in international finance. After a discussion of a general rational expectations asset pricing model, Hodrick considers the development and implementation of econometric tests of various hypotheses that have been offered as candidate characterizations of efficiency in foreign exchange markets. He shows that models which ignore the role or risk are rejected by the data, and examines alternative models of risk premiums. In doing so, he provides a critical examination and review of the subject area.
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