This paper discusses the dynamic response of employment, average hours, and real wages to macroeconomic policy shocks in the UK in the period 1970 Q1-2003 Q1. Following a monetary policy shock the adjustment of labour input is primarily along the extensive margin. However, there is also significant
Macroeconomic shocks and the CAPM: evidence from the UK stockmarket
✍ Scribed by Andrew Clare; Raymond O’Brien; Stephen Thomas; Michael Wickens
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 197 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1076-9307
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The UK stockmarket is tested for mean variance efficiency (MVE) in the sense that sectoral stock returns satisfy the restrictions implied by CAPM. There are two main innovations in the paper. One is the use of a model for excess returns in which the conditional covariance matrix of returns varies over time due to the simultaneous influence of four macroeconomic shocks. The other is the use of a likelihood ratio test for MVE calculated from analytical derivatives of the likelihood function in order to reduce the computational burden of these high parameter dimensional models. The model with macroeconomic shocks is compared with the multivariate ARCH-in-mean model. Although the macroeconomic shocks model is found to perform slightly better than the ARCH model, and both produce a significant and plausible estimate of the coefficient of risk aversion, the null hypothesis that the UK stockmarket is mean variance efficient is rejected for both models in favour of the alternative hypothesis that equity returns are an unrestricted linear function of asset shares. Another important finding is that the most important shocks affecting the UK stockmarket either have an international origin or are due to the bond market.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this paper we analyse whether the consumption based capital asset pricing model is consistent with asset return data from the French and German stock markets. We evaluate the performance of the C-CAPM by applying the nonparametric methodology of Hansen and Jagannathan and adopting five alternativ
Degradation of carbofuran in a topsoil sample from a previously untreated üeld site in the UK was characterized by a short lag period followed by rapid degradation. Carbofuran added subsequently to the same soil degraded rapidly without the lag period. In a subsoil sample from the same site, the ürs
## Abstract This paper offers new evidence on informed trading around merger and acquisition announcements from the UK equity and options market. The analysis suggests that in about 25–33% of events there is abnormal option trading volume during the month that precedes the announcement. Such eviden