TY - JOUR AU - Blanchard,Olivier J. AU - Watson,Mark W. TI - Bubbles, Rational Expectations and Financial Markets JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 945 PY - 1983 Y2 - June 1983 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w0945 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w0945.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Olivier J. Blanchard International Monetary Fund Economic Counsellor and Director Research Department 700 19th Street, NW Rm. 10-700 Washington DC, 20431 Tel: 202-623-7825 Fax: 202-623-7271 E-Mail: blanchar@mit.edu Mark W. Watson Department of Economics Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544-1013 Tel: 609/258-4811 Fax: 609/258-5533 E-Mail: mwatson@princeton.edu AB - This paper investigates the nature and the presence of bubbles in financial markets. Are bubbles consistent with rationality? If they are, do they, like Ponzi games, require the presence of new players forever? Do they imply impossible events in finite time, such as negative prices? Do they need to go on forever to be rational? Can they have real effects? These are some of the questions asked in the first three sections. The general conclusion is that bubbles, in many markets, are consistent with rationality, that phenomena such as runaway asset prices and market crashes are consistent with rational bubbles. In the last two sections, we consider whether the presence of bubbles in a particular market can be detected statistically. The task is much easier if there are data on both prices and returns. In this case, as shown by Shiller and Singleton, the hypothesis of no bubble implies restrictions on their joint distribution and can be tested. In markets in which returns are difficult to observe, possibly because of a nonpecuniary component, such as gold, the task is more difficult. We consider the use of both "runs tests" and "tail tests" and conclude that they give circumstantial evidence at best. ER -