4.5 Article

Exchange Rate Predictability

Journal

JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC LITERATURE
Volume 51, Issue 4, Pages 1063-1119

Publisher

AMER ECONOMIC ASSOC
DOI: 10.1257/jel.51.4.1063

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Funding

  1. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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The main goal of this article is to provide an answer to the question: does anything forecast exchange rates, and if so, which variables? It is well known that exchange rate fluctuations are very difficult to predict using economic models, and that a random walk forecasts exchange rates better than any economic model (the Meese and Rogoff puzzle). However, the recent literature has identified a series of fundamentals/methodologies that claim to have resolved the puzzle. This article provides a critical review of the recent literature on exchange rate forecasting and illustrates the new methodologies and fundamentals that have been recently proposed in an up-to-date, thorough empirical analysis. Overall, our analysis of the literature and the data suggests that the answer to the question: Are exchange rates predictable? is, It depends-on the choice of predictor, forecast horizon, sample period, model, and forecast evaluation method. Predictability is most apparent when one or more of the following hold: the predictors are Taylor rule or net foreign assets, the model is linear, and a small number of parameters are estimated. The toughest benchmark is the random walk without drift.

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