Abstract

This paper documents common empirical regularities in the foreign exchange market and in the US stock market. We find that increases in interest rates are associated with predictable increases in the volatility of returns in both markets, and that expected returns both in the stock market and in the foreign exchange market are negatively correlated with nominal interest rates. We show that not taking into account the time variation of second moments may seriously affect tests of asset pricing models. Using a numerical example based on the static capital asset pricing model, we are able to produce fluctuations in risk premia similar to those observed empirically. Finally we show that the overidentifying restrictions of the latent variable capital asset pricing model are not rejected when beats are assumed to be correlated with nominal interest rates.

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