Abstract

 
 

References (6)



 
 

Citations (1)



 


 



Inflation, Resource Utilization, and Debt and Equity Returns


Patric H. Hendershott


University of Aberdeen - Centre for Property Research; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

July 1982

NBER Working Paper No. w0699

Abstract:     
Enormously diverse real and nominal ex post returns on equity and short and long term debt securities have accompanied substantial variations in inflation and resource utilization during the past half century. This paper contains an examination of the relationships among these security returns and an analysis of the effects of inflation and resource utilization on the relationships. The three major results are the following. First, prior to the Treasury-Federal Reserve Accord in 1951, nominal yields on one-month Treasury bills were reasonably stable, while real bill rates were incredibly volatile. Since 1952, the reverse has been true. Nominal bill rates have cycled around a rising trend, and real bill rates have stayed near zero. Second, changes in yields on new-issue, long-term bonds have been largely unanticipated, and these changes have dominated the realized returns on bonds relative to Treasury bills. Because bond rates have risen with (unexpected) inflation during the last fifteen years, bonds have earned negative real returns. Third, the relative returns on equities and bonds are greatly affected by the business cycle with equities performing very well around troughs and very poorly around peaks. This has been true for all ten troughs since 1926 and all six peaks since 1946.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 27

working papers series


Download This Paper

Date posted: August 18, 2004  

Suggested Citation

Hendershott, Patric H., Inflation, Resource Utilization, and Debt and Equity Returns (July 1982). NBER Working Paper No. w0699. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=349096

Contact Information

Patric H. Hendershott (Contact Author)
University of Aberdeen - Centre for Property Research ( email )
Aberdeen AB24 2UF
Scotland
National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) ( email )
1050 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


Paper statistics
Abstract Views: 337
Downloads: 18
References:  6
Citations:  1

© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.  FAQ   Terms of Use   Privacy Policy   Copyright
This page was processed by apollo4 in 0.484 seconds