Global Risks in the Currency Market*

2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 1237-1270
Author(s):  
George Panayotov

Abstract Global risks allow theoretical models of the currency market to explain currency risk premia. Yet, there is no consensus in the empirical literature on which factors can represent global risks. We develop an asset pricing test for global risk factors that relies on the key assumption of a distinct US global risk exposure. Using perspective-invariant test assets that are particularly suitable for studying global risks, we apply the test on a large set of factors used in recent studies of currency risk. We find that only equity market risk can represent a global risk in the currency market.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ningyuan Chen ◽  
Anran Li ◽  
Kalyan Talluri

Reviews for products and services written by previous consumers have become an influential input to the purchase decision of customers. Many service businesses monitor the reviews closely for feedback as well as detecting service flaws, and they have become part of the performance review for service managers with rewards tied to improvement in the aggregate rating. Many empirical papers have documented a bias in the aggregate ratings, arising because of customers’ inherent self-selection in their choices and bounded rationality in evaluating previous reviews. Although there is a vast empirical literature analyzing reviews, theoretical models that try to isolate and explain the bias in ratings are relatively few. Assuming consumers simply substitute the average rating that they see as a proxy for quality, we give a precise characterization of the self-selection bias on ratings of an assortment of products when consumers confound ex ante innate preferences for a product or service with ex post experience and service quality and do not separate the two. We develop a parsimonious choice model for consumer purchase decisions and show that the mechanism leads to an upward bias, which is more pronounced for niche products. Based on our theoretical characterization, we study the effect on pricing and assortment decisions of the firm when potential customers purchase based on the biased ratings. Our results give insights into how quality, prices, and customer feedback are intricately tied together for service firms. This paper was accepted by David Simchi-Levi, operations management.


Author(s):  
Lukas Menkhoff ◽  
Lucio Sarno ◽  
Maik Schmeling ◽  
Andreas Schrimpf
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (30) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nermina Pobrić

The study investigates the currency risk exposure ofcompanies. The author presents relevant theoreticalknowledge and the results of empirical research of thecurrency risk exposure of companies and its determinants.Theoretical viewpoints on the impact of companycharacteristics and ambient factors on the currency riskexposure of companies are consistent. In empirical research,theoretical attitudes about the impact of ambientfactors on the currency risk exposure of companies havebeen confirmed, whereas theoretical attitudes on theimpact of company characteristics have not been confirmedor not confirmed in a sufficient number of empiricalstudies. Based on the obtained results of empiricalresearch, it is not possible to conclude with certaintywhich characteristics of the company affect the currencyrisk exposure of companies.


2018 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-43
Author(s):  
Florian Unbehaun ◽  
Franz Fuerst

Purpose This study aims to assess the impact of location on capitalization rates and risk premia. Design/methodology/approach Using a transaction-based data series for the five largest office markets in Germany from 2005 to 2015, regression analysis is performed to account for a large set of asset-level drivers such as location, age and size and time-varying macro-level drivers. Findings Location is found to be a key determinant of cap rates and risk premia. CBD locations are found to attract lower cap rates and lower risk premia in three of the five largest markets in Germany. Interestingly, this effect is not found in the non-CBD locations of these markets, suggesting that the lower perceived risk associated with these large markets is restricted to a relatively small area within these markets that are reputed to be safe investments. Research limitations/implications The findings imply that investors view properties in peripheral urban locations as imperfect substitutes for CBD properties. Further analysis also shows that these risk premia are not uniformly applied across real estate asset types. The CBD risk effect is particularly pronounced for office and retail assets, apparently considered “prime” investments within the central locations. Originality/value This is one of the first empirical studies of the risk implications of peripheral commercial real estate locations. It is also one of the first large-scale cap rate analyses of the German commercial real estate market. The results demonstrate that risk perceptions of investors have a distinct spatial dimension.


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