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Order Flow and Exchange Rate Dynamics
Martin D. Evans, Georgetown University and NBER
Richard K. Lyons, Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley
ABSTRACT: Macroeconomic models of nominal exchange rates perform poorly. In sample, R 2 statistics as high as 10 percent are rare. Out of sample, these models are typically out-forecast by a naïve random walk. This paper presents a model of a new kind. Instead of relying exclusively on macroeconomic determinants, the model includes a determinant from the field of microstructure-order flow. Order flow is the proximate determinant of price in all microstructure models. This is a radically different approach to exchange rate determination. It is also strikingly successful in accounting for realized rates. Our model of daily exchange-rate changes produces R 2 statistics above 50 percent. Out of sample, our model produces significantly better short-horizon forecasts than a random walk. For the DM/$ spot market as a whole, we find that $1 billion of net dollar purchases increases the DM price of a dollar by about 1 pfennig.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Martin D. Evans and Richard K. Lyons,
"Order Flow and Exchange Rate Dynamics"
(August 1, 1999).
Research Program in Finance Working Papers.
Paper RPF-288.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/iber/finance/RPF-288
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