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The Purpose of this study is to explore the behavior of exchange rates in five Asian
economies; namely Pakistan, India, Indonesia, Korea and Sri Lanka. The causality
between capital and currency markets has been investigated in the first section of study.
In second section, the link between exchange rate and economic variables has been
scrutinized, while in the third section, forecasting performance of economic models has
been compared with that of random walk and autoregressive integrated moving average
model.
Using Granger Causality test and Johansen Cointegration, the causality between stock
and currency markets has been explored. Link between macro economic fundamentals
and exchange rates has been investigated using ordinary least square method and
Johansen’s cointegration, while forecasting performance of economic models has been
compared with that of random walk and autoregressive integrated moving average model
using one graphical and four statistical measures. These measures are Perfect Forecast
Line (PFL), Root Mean Square Error (RMSE), Mean Absolute Error (MAE), Median of
Absolute Deviation (MAD) and Success Ratio (SR).
Nature of short run causality between stock and currency markets has been found
different in different countries. In Pakistan and Sri Lanka, causality runs from stock
market to currency market while feed back relationship has been found in case of
Indonesia and Korea. In India, causality running from exchange rate to stock market has
been found significant. However, no long run causality between stock and currency
markets has been found in sample economies. Thus these two financial markets support
asset market theory in the long run. However, regression analysis proves that economic
variables are not senseless, whereas Johansen cointegration technique affirm the
existence of long run relationship between exchange rate and macro economic variables.
Johansen’s cointegration reports three cointegrating equations in Pakistan, India, Korea
and Sri Lanka while two cointegration equations in case of Indonesia. Vector Error
Correction Mechanism has been applied to gauge the speed of adjustment in relationship
between exchange rate and macroeconomic fundamentals.
Lastly predictive capacity of economic fundamentals based models namely Purchasing
Power Parity, Interest Rate Parity and Adhoc model has been compared to that of
Random Walk and Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average Model. In the sample
forecasting has been used for comparison. Predictive capacity has been investigated using
one graphical method called Perfect Forecast Line and four statistical methods. Statistical
xiimethods include Root Mean Square Error, Mean Absolute Error, Median of Absolute
Deviation and Success Ratio. All the four measures support fundamentals based
approaches in all the sample economies except Indonesia where Random Walk Model
has the power to beat fundamentals’ based approaches on the basis of all the four
measures of statistical evaluation. |
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