Search Results

Showing results 1 to 7 of approximately 7.

(refine search)
SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Author:Engstrom, Eric 

Discussion Paper
(Don't Fear) The Yield Curve

In this note, we show that, for predicting recessions, such measures of a "long-term spread"--the spread in yields between a far-off maturity such as 10 years and a shorter maturity such as 1 or 2 years--are statistically dominated by a more economically intuitive alternative, a "near-term forward spread."
FEDS Notes , Paper 2018-06-28

Discussion Paper
(Don't Fear) The Yield Curve, Reprise

In recent months, financial market perceptions about the future path of short-term interest rates have evolved amidst signals from policymakers suggesting that reduced monetary policy accommodation is in the offing. As with previous episodes of policy tightening, most recently in 2018, one can hear an attendant rise in the volume of commentary about a decline in the slope of the yield curve and the risk of "inversion," whereby long-term yields fall below shorter-maturity yields.
FEDS Notes , Paper 2022-03-25

Discussion Paper
Forecasting Stock Market Crashes is Hard--Especially Future Ones: Can Option Prices Help?

Stock market gyrations are notoriously hard to predict, and not for lack of effort by legions of investors, market commentators and academics. In this article, we investigate whether efforts to forecast stock market crashes, in particular, can be aided by using information embedded in options prices.
FEDS Notes , Paper 2014-05-07

Discussion Paper
Has the Inflation Risk Premium Fallen? Is it Now Negative?

In this note, we examine the theoretical determinants of one important component of inflation compensation, the inflation risk premium, and argue that a secular decline in the inflation risk premium may be responsible for a substantial portion of the decline in inflation compensation in recent years.
FEDS Notes , Paper 2016-04-04

Conference Paper
Inflation and the stock market: Understanding the “Fed Model”

The so-called Fed model postulates that the dividend or earnings yield on stocks should equal the yield on nominal Treasury bonds, or at least that the two should be highly correlated. In US data there is indeed a strikingly high time series correlation between the yield on nominal bonds and the dividend yield on equities. This positive correlation is often attributed to the fact that both bond and equity yields comove strongly and positively with expected inflation. While inflation comoves with nominal bond yields for well-known reasons, the positive correlation between expected inflation ...
Proceedings , Issue Jan

Working Paper
Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Effects of COVID-19: A Real-time Analysis

We extract aggregate demand and supply shocks for the US economy from real-time survey data on inflation and real GDP growth using a novel identification scheme. Our approach exploits non-Gaussian features of macroeconomic forecast revisions and imposes minimal theoretical assumptions. After verifying that our results for U.S. post-World War II business cycle fluctuations are largely in line with the prevailing consensus, we proceed to study output and price fluctuations during the COVID-19 pandemic. We attribute two thirds of the decline in 2020:Q1 GDP to a negative shock to aggregate ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2020-049

Working Paper
Risk, uncertainty, and asset prices

We identify the relative importance of changes in the conditional variance of fundamentals (which we call "uncertainty") and changes in risk aversion ("risk" for short) in the determination of the term structure, equity prices, and risk premiums. Theoretically, we introduce persistent time-varying uncertainty about the fundamentals in an external habit model. The model matches the dynamics of dividend and consumption growth, including their volatility dynamics and many salient asset market phenomena. While the variation in dividend yields and the equity risk premium is primarily driven by ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2005-40

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Author

Bekaert, Geert 3 items

Sharpe, Steven A. 2 items

Chen, Andrew Y. 1 items

Ermolov, Andrey 1 items

Grishchenko, Olesya V. 1 items

show more (2)

FILTER BY Jel Classification

E31 1 items

E32 1 items

E43 1 items

E44 1 items

FILTER BY Keywords

Asset pricing 1 items

Business cycles 1 items

COVID-19 1 items

Inflation (Finance) 1 items

Macroeconomic volatility 1 items

Risk 1 items

show more (3)

PREVIOUS / NEXT