TY - JOUR AU - Bekaert,Geert AU - Engstrom,Eric TI - Inflation and the Stock Market:Understanding the "Fed Model" JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 15024 PY - 2009 Y2 - June 2009 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w15024 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w15024.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Geert Bekaert Graduate School of Business Columbia University 3022 Broadway, 411 Uris Hall New York, NY 10027 Tel: 212/854-9156 Fax: 212/662-8474 E-Mail: gb241@columbia.edu Eric Engstrom Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Washington DC 20551 Tel: 734-763-6391 Fax: 734-764-3146 E-Mail: eric.engstrom@frb.gov AB - The Fed model postulates that the dividend or earnings yield on stocks should equal the yield on nominal Treasury bonds, or at least that the two should be highly correlated. In US data, there is indeed a strikingly high time series correlation between the yield on nominal bonds and the dividend yield on equities. This positive correlation is often attributed to the fact that both bond and equity yields commove strongly and positively with expected inflation. While inflation commoves with nominal bond yields for well-known reasons, the positive correlation between expected inflation and equity yields has long puzzled economists. We show that the effect is consistent with modern asset pricing theory incorporating uncertainty about real growth prospects and habit -- based risk version. In the US, high expected inflation has tended to coincided with periods of heightened uncertainty about real economic growth and unusually high risk aversion, both of which rationally raise equity yields. Our findings suggest that countries with high incidence of stagflation should have relatively high correlation between bond yields and equity yields and we confirm that this is true in a panel of international data ER -