Which Are the World's Wobblier Currencies? Reference Exchange Rates and Their Variation

Roger J. Bowden, Victoria University of Wellington
Jennifer Z. Zhu, Victoria University of Wellington

Abstract

Measuring country exchange rates relative to a common reference basket results in a set of no-arbitrage prices, unlike trade-weighted indexes, the usual method of comparing country exchange rate histories. The reference basket is analogous to a portfolio, and its choice can be resolved by drawing on required economic interpretations or uses. We use currency reference rates to examine the historical variability of different currencies over designated cyclical bands. The temporal decompositions used are those provided by wavelet analysis, which is light on maintained assumptions about data generating processes. Some countries, notably Japan and New Zealand do exhibit a powerful but irregular medium term cycle, while others are much more stable. Implications are briefly examined for investment, hedging, monetary policy and common currency studies.

Recommended Citation

Roger J. Bowden and Jennifer Z. Zhu (2007) "Which Are the World's Wobblier Currencies? Reference Exchange Rates and Their Variation", Studies in Nonlinear Dynamics & Econometrics: Vol. 11: No. 3, Article 5.
http://www.bepress.com/snde/vol11/iss3/art5

Related Files

bowden_datacode.zip (42 kB)
Data and code

 
 
 
 

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