TY - JOUR AU - Levich,Richard M. TI - Empirical Studies of Exchange Rates: Price Behavior, Rate Determinationand Market Efficiency JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 1112 PY - 1986 Y2 - April 1986 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w1112 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w1112.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Richard M. Levich Stern School of Business New York University 44 West 4th Street New York, NY 10012 Tel: 212/998-0422 Fax: 212/995-4256 E-Mail: RLEVICH@STERN.NYU.EDU AB - Theoretical and empirical research completed over the last decade has dramatically increased our understanding of exchange rate behavior. The major insight to come from this decade of research is that foreign exchange is a financial asset. In an asset pricing framework, current exchange rates reflect the expected values of future exogenous variables. The purpose of this paper is to survay the empirical evidence on exchange rate behavior, market efficiency and related topics. Section 2 presents a stylized history of exchange rate behavior during 1970's. Alternative measures of volatility and transaction costs are reviewed. Tests of specific exchange rate determination models are presented in Section 3. Empirical studies have been fairly successful in constructing models to explain cross-sectional exchange rate differences and to explain time series exchange rate developments over the medium-run and long-run. Following the asset market framework , recent studies have demonstrated that unanticipated exchange rate changes are significantly correlated with "news" concerning fundamental macroeconomic variables. Evidence on foreign exchange market efficiency is summurized in Section 4. Efficiency studies remain difficult to formulate (because of small samples and unobserved variables) and difficult to interpret ( because of the joint hypothesis problem). Several recent studies claim that speculative profit opportunities are present, but it is unclear whether these are related to risk premiums or actual market inefficiencies. ER -