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Dynamic relationship between exchange rates and stock prices for the G7 countries: A nonlinear ARDL approach

•We examine the relationship between stock prices and exchange rates in G7 countries.•In the short -run, both the flow-oriented and the portfolio balance approaches are supported.•A nonlinear ARDL model shows that rising and falling stock prices have differential long-run impacts on exchange rates.•...

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Published in:Journal of international financial markets, institutions & money institutions & money, 2022-05, Vol.78, p.101541, Article 101541
Main Authors: Nusair, Salah A., Olson, Dennis
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•We examine the relationship between stock prices and exchange rates in G7 countries.•In the short -run, both the flow-oriented and the portfolio balance approaches are supported.•A nonlinear ARDL model shows that rising and falling stock prices have differential long-run impacts on exchange rates.•Our tests provide long-run support for the portfolio balance approach, but not for the flow-oriented approach. This paper employs linear and nonlinear ARDL models to examine the short-run and long-run relationship between stock prices and exchange rates in the G7 countries. Both the flow-oriented approach that exchange rates affect stock prices and the portfolio balance approach that stock prices affect exchange rates are supported in the short-run. Neither model is supported in the long-run using linear ARDL models, but the nonlinear ARDL model shows evidence supporting the portfolio balance approach in four of the countries. In these four countries we find that rising and falling stock prices have significant long-run effects on their exchange rates. Furthermore, Granger causality tests confirm that causality runs from stock prices to exchange rates in six of the countries. Thus, the use of a longer and more recent data set provides stronger long-run support for the portfolio balance approach than found in most of the recent literature, while we confirm results of recent research showing no long-run evidence of causation running from exchange rates to stock prices.
ISSN:1042-4431
1873-0612
DOI:10.1016/j.intfin.2022.101541