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Testing for unit roots has been among the most heavily researched topics in Econometrics for the last quarter of a century. Much less researched is the equally important issue of the appropriate transformation if any of the variable of interest which should preceed any such testing. In...
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We derive the probability limit of the standard Dickey-Fuller-test in the context of an exponential random walk. This result might be useful in interpreting tests for unit roots when the test is inadvertantly applied to the levels of the data when the true random walk is in the logs.
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Testing for unit roots has been among the most heavily researched topics in Econometrics for the last quarter of a century. Much less researched is the equally important issue of the appropriate transformation if any of the variable of interest which should preceed any such testing. In...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009783562
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The first example involves the real data given in Table 1 which are the results of an interlaboratory test. The boxplots are shown in Fig. 1 where the dotted line denotes the mean of the observations and the solid line the median. We note that only the results of the Laboratories 1 and 3 lie...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10003024170
Under fairly weak conditions it is shown that an optimal portfolio choice exists and is unique. It is further shown that this choice is a continuous function of the joint distribution function of the random returns on the assets from which the choice is made.
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