News from the U. S. And Japan: Which Moves the Yen/Dollar Exchange Rate?
47 Pages Posted: 19 Jun 2004 Last revised: 27 Jul 2022
Date Written: March 1986
Abstract
Intra-daily movements in the yen/dollar exchange rate were examined in four non-overlapping segments within each business day from January1980 to September 1985. The empirical results yielded several conclusions. First, most depreciation of the yen (appreciation of the dollar) from late 1982 to early 1984 occurred in the New York market. The direction of the yen was mostly neutral in the Tokyo market. Also, the volatility of the exchange rate decreased considerably in the Tokyo market. The volatility in the New York market, on the other hand, did not decrease untilvery recently. Second, market efficiency was examined in terms of the random-walk behavior of short-run movements in the yen/dollar rate. Information on the preceding segments within a day was sometimes significant in predicting the exchange rate movement in a market. Third, there is evidence of the "profit-taking" behavior, or overshooting, in that a large jump (more than 3 absolute yen) in any market tends to be reversed by a fifth of the jump during the same day in the next market. Finally,the relative effects of news from the U.S. and Japan were examined explicitly both with respect to possible major events behind large jumps andthe response of the yen/dollar rate to particular economic announcements in both countries. Over the entire sample period, news concerning the U.S. money stock had the only significant effects.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Meteor Showers or Heat Waves? Heteroskedastic Intra-Daily Volatility in the Foreign Exchange Market
By Robert F. Engle, Takatoshi Ito, ...
-
An Investigation of Risk and Return in Forward Foreign Exchange
-
Survey Evidence on the Rationality of Interest Rate Expectations
-
Commodity Prices, Overshooting, Money Surprises, and Fed Credibility
-
By V. Vance Roley and Carl E. Walsh
-
The Intra-Daily Exchange Rate Dynamics and Monetary Policies after the G5 Agreement
-
The Response of Short-Term Interest Rates to Weekly Money Announcements
-
The Structure of Expectations of the Weekly Money Supply Announcement
By Thomas Urich and Paul Wachtel
-
Why Money Announcements Move Interest Rates: An Answer from the Foreign Exchange Market