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ECONOMIC TECHNIQUES CAN BE USED TO FORECAST SHORT-RUN EXCHANGE
RATE MOVEMENTS
Are exchange rates ultimately tied down by economic fundamentals?
Or are they free to drift at random on a sea of speculation? Writing
in the latest issue of the Economic Journal, Professor Ronald Macdonald
challenges the conventional wisdom by arguing that traditional economic
fundamentals - such as relative money supplies, current account
positions and relative interest rates - can be used to produce impressive
forecasts of exchange rate movements at horizons as short as two
months ahead. He also argues that such fundamentals can be used
to obtain measures of an equilibrium exchange rate,
an attractive proposition for policy-makers, companies and foreign
exchange traders interested in assessing if a currency is under-
or overvalued.
Macdonald notes the conventional view that the best available model
of exchange rate movements over a horizon of up to three years is
a random walk. Essentially, this means that movements
in exchanges rates over this time span are unforecastable. The random
walk consensus has very uncomfortable conclusions. Many financial
institutions, for example, are interested in hedging exchange rate
movements at horizons of much shorter duration than 36 months.
Macdonalds results offer hope for would-be forecasters, suggesting
that currencies can be forecast using standard criteria at horizons
as short as two months ahead. These are real time forecasts
in the sense that they could have been used by foreign exchange
dealers. The success of these forecasts comes from the use of state-of-the-art
econometric methods, which capture both the short-run dynamics and
the longer-run mean reversion in exchange rates - the tendency to
return to average conditions.
The research also indicates that traditional fundamentals can be
used to say something positive about the equilibrium value of a
currency. This is useful for policy-makers if the actual values
of currencies take long swings away from their underlying fundamentals
before reverting to the mean. Knowing the equilibrium value of a
currency may also be of value if a country is considering joining
a monetary union, such as EMU.
Macdonald demonstrates that the model that economists often turn
to first for a fix on the equilibrium value of a currency - namely,
purchasing power parity (PPP) - is not particularly useful for this
purpose. There are two problems. One is that the empirical form
of PPP is often very different to the textbook definition (coefficients
on prices are often very far from their prior values). Second, the
speed with which exchange rates move towards PPP, the so-called
half-life, is regarded as being far too slow to be consistent with
a traditional form of PPP. Macdonald shows that that relatively
simple measures of equilibrium may be obtained from models that
explicitly recognise the real factors driving exchange rates.
Note for Editors: Exchange Rate Behaviour: Are Fundamentals
Important? by Ronald Macdonald is published in the November
1999 issue of the Economic Journal. Macdonald is Professor of Economics
at the University of Strathclyde.
For Further information: contact Ronald Macdonald on 0141 548 3861
(e-mail: r.r.macdonald@strath.ac.uk); RES Media Consultant Romesh
Vaitilingam on 0117-983-9770 or 0468-661095 (email: romesh@compuserve.com);
or RES Media Assistant Niall Flynn on 0171-878-2919 (email: nflynn@cepr.org).
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