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A Habit-Based Explanation of the Exchange Rate Risk Premium

Author(s)
Verdelhan, Adrien Frederic
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Abstract
This paper presents a model that reproduces the uncovered interest rate parity puzzle. Investors have preferences with external habits. Countercyclical risk premia and procyclical real interest rates arise endogenously. During bad times at home, when domestic consumption is close to the habit level, the representative investor is very risk averse. When the domestic investor is more risk averse than her foreign counterpart, the exchange rate is closely tied to domestic consumption growth shocks. The domestic investor therefore expects a positive currency excess return. Because interest rates are low in bad times, expected currency excess returns increase with interest rate differentials.
Date issued
2010-01
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/76223
Department
Sloan School of Management
Journal
Journal of Finance
Publisher
American Finance Association/Wiley
Citation
Verdelhan, Adrien. “A Habit-Based Explanation of the Exchange Rate Risk Premium.” The Journal of Finance 65.1 (2010): 123–146.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0022-1082
1540-6261

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