Real-Time Price Discovery in Stock, Bond and Foreign Exchange Markets

56 Pages Posted: 9 Jun 2005 Last revised: 30 Nov 2022

See all articles by Torben G. Andersen

Torben G. Andersen

Northwestern University - Kellogg School of Management; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); Aarhus University - CREATES

Clara Vega

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Tim Bollerslev

Duke University - Finance; Duke University - Department of Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Francis X. Diebold

University of Pennsylvania - Department of Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: May 2005

Abstract

We characterize the response of U.S., German and British stock, bond and foreign exchange markets to real-time U.S. macroeconomic news. Our analysis is based on a unique data set of high-frequency futures returns for each of the markets. We find that news surprises produce conditional mean jumps; hence high-frequency stock, bond and exchange rate dynamics are linked to fundamentals. The details of the linkages are particularly intriguing as regards equity markets. We show that equity markets react differently to the same news depending on the state of the U.S. economy, with bad news having a positive impact during expansions and the traditionally-expected negative impact during recessions. We rationalize this by temporal variation in the competing "cash flow" and "discount rate" effects for equity valuation. This finding also helps explain the apparent time-varying correlation between stock and bond returns, and the relatively small equity market news announcement effect when averaged across expansions and recessions. Hence, while our results confirm previous unconditional rankings suggesting that bond markets almost uniformly react most strongly to macroeconomic news, followed by foreign exchange and then equity markets, importantly when conditioning on the state of the economy the foreign exchange and equity markets appear equally responsive. Lastly, relying on the pronounced heteroskedasticity in the new high-frequency data, we also document important contemporaneous linkages across all markets and countries over-and-above the direct news announcement effects.

Suggested Citation

Andersen, Torben G. and Vega, Clara and Bollerslev, Tim and Diebold, Francis X., Real-Time Price Discovery in Stock, Bond and Foreign Exchange Markets (May 2005). NBER Working Paper No. w11312, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=720403

Torben G. Andersen (Contact Author)

Northwestern University - Kellogg School of Management ( email )

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Clara Vega

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Tim Bollerslev

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Francis X. Diebold

University of Pennsylvania - Department of Economics ( email )

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