7,829 research outputs found
Equity Price Dynamics Before and After the Introduction of the Euro
Daily data from the German and U.S. equity markets before and after the introduction of the Euro are used to study the effect of exchange rate regime choices on equity markets. It is found that, since the introduction of the Euro, the volatility and the persistence of the German stock index have fallen significantly relative to those of the U.S. index. However, the switch in exchange rate arrangement appears to have no significant implication for the causal relationships - both the mean and varianc causalities - between the two equity markets
Output Dynamics of the G7 Countries - Stochastic Trends and Cyclical Movements
Using a time series framework, the paper studies the interac tions of the annual real per capita GDP data of the G7 countries. We find evidence of six common nonstationary processes behind the international output dynamics. In addition, there is evidence for the existence of a common business cycle among these coun t ries. The trend and cycle components of each output series are obtained with a procedure that accounts for the presence of both the common nonstationary and cyclical factors. It is found that the relative variability and the correlation of the trend and cycle components are not similar across the G7 countries.
Equity Price Dynamics Before and After the Introduction of the Euro: A Note
Daily data from the German and U.S. equity markets before and after the introduction of the Euro are used to study the effect of exchange rate regime choices on equity markets. It is found that, since the introduction of the Euro, the volatility and the persistence of the German stock index have fallen significantly relative to those of the U.S. index. However, the switch in exchange rate arrangement appears to have no significant implication for the causal relationships – both the mean and variance causalities – between the two equity markets.
Equity Price Dynamics Before and After the Introduction of the Euro
Daily data from the German and U.S. equity markets before and after the introduction of the Euro are used to study the effect of exchange rate regime choices on equity markets. It is found that, since the introduction of the Euro, the volatility and the persistence of the German stock index have fallen significantly relative to those of the U.S. index. However, the switch in exchange rate arrangement appears to have no significant implication for the causal relationships - both the mean and varianc causalities - between the two equity markets.
Sectoral Trends and Cycles in Germany
We examine the comovements between the output indexes of three German sectors (manufacturing, mining, and agriculture) and the three corresponding sectoral stock market indexes. It is found that data with and without seasonal adjustment give mixed results on the long-run interaction between the sectoral indexes. Compared with data that are non-seasonally adjusted, the adjusted data offer a weaker evidence on the cointegration relationship between a) the sectoral output indexes, b) sectoral stock indexes, and c) individual pairs of real and financial indexes. On short-run comovement, seasonally adjusted data offer stronger evidence on the presence of common synchronized and non-synchronized cyclical components.
Relay-proof channels using UWB lasers
Alice is a hand-held device. Bob is a device providing a service, such as an ATM, an automatic door, or an anti-aircraft gun pointing at the gyro-copter in which Alice is travelling. Bob and Alice have never met, but share a key, which Alice uses to request a service from Bob (dispense cash, open door, don't shoot). Mort pretends to Bob that she is Alice, and her accomplice Cove pretends to Alice that he is Bob. Mort and Cove relay the appropriate challenges and responses to one another over a channel hidden from Alice and Bob. Meanwhile Alice waits impatiently in front of a different ATM, or the wrong door, or another gun. How can such an attack be prevented?Final Accepted Versio
On utility-based super-replication prices of contingent claims with unbounded payoffs
Consider a financial market in which an agent trades with utility-induced
restrictions on wealth. For a utility function which satisfies the condition of
reasonable asymptotic elasticity at we prove that the utility-based
super-replication price of an unbounded (but sufficiently integrable)
contingent claim is equal to the supremum of its discounted expectations under
pricing measures with finite {\it loss-entropy}. For an agent whose utility
function is unbounded from above, the set of pricing measures with finite
loss-entropy can be slightly larger than the set of pricing measures with
finite entropy. Indeed, the former set is the closure of the latter under a
suitable weak topology.
Central to our proof is the representation of a cone of utility-based
super-replicable contingent claims as the polar cone to the set of finite
loss-entropy pricing measures. The cone is defined as the closure, under
a relevant weak topology, of the cone of all (sufficiently integrable)
contingent claims that can be dominated by a zero-financed terminal wealth.
We investigate also the natural dual of this result and show that the polar
cone to is generated by those separating measures with finite
loss-entropy. The full two-sided polarity we achieve between measures and
contingent claims yields an economic justification for the use of the cone
, and an open question
- …