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Conventional wisdom holds that stocks are riskier than bonds; thus when the stock market becomes volatile, money flows from the stock market into the perceived safe haven of the bond market. In this article, we find that this notion is not necessarily accurate and might lead people to make...
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Previous literature on the stability of the US money demand function suggests mixed results. In this article, we study the stability of the money demand function from the standpoint of structural changes in the function. We first investigate if a stable money demand function can be found for the...
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This article extends the research on the improvements to the efficient portfolio frontier in globally diversified portfolios. We examine efficient frontiers of regional equity portfolios from developed and undeveloped countries. We show that a globally diversified portfolio has higher reward...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008466684
The meltdown hypothesis predicts a large fall in stock prices when baby boomers cash in their equity holdings to fund their retirement. Using an estimated vector autoregression model this paper finds empirical evidence that retiring baby boomers will induce a drag on the stock market, but most...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005491242
In his Nobel Laureate lecture Engle notes that asymmetric volatility has a significant impact on risk. In this article equity market volatility is estimated using an asymmetric power-GARCH model which nests many other popular models. We estimate the magnitude of asymmetric volatility for several...
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