Solutions To The Review Questions at The End of Chapter 7
Solutions To The Review Questions at The End of Chapter 7
Solutions To The Review Questions at The End of Chapter 7
1. (a) Many series in finance and economics in their levels (or log-levels) forms
are non-stationary and exhibit stochastic trends. They have a tendency not to
revert to a mean level, but they “wander” for prolonged periods in one
direction or the other. Examples would be most kinds of asset or goods prices,
GDP, unemployment, money supply, etc. Such variables can usually be made
stationary by transforming them into their differences or by constructing
percentage changes of them.
Most importantly therefore, we are not able to perform any hypothesis tests in
models which inappropriately use non-stationary data since the test statistics
will no longer follow the distributions which we assumed they would (e.g. a t
or F), so any inferences we make are likely to be invalid.
(c) A weakly stationary process was defined in Chapter 5, and has the
following characteristics:
1. E(yt) =
2.
3. t1 , t2
That is, a stationary process has a constant mean, a constant variance, and a
constant covariance structure. A strictly stationary process could be defined
by an equation such as
for any t1 , t2 , ..., tT Z, any k Z and T = 1, 2, ...., and where F denotes the
joint distribution function of the set of random variables. It should be evident
from the definitions of weak and strict stationarity that the latter is a stronger
definition and is a special case of the former. In the former case, only the first
two moments of the distribution has to be constant (i.e. the mean and
variances (and covariances)), whilst in the latter case, all moments of the
distribution (i.e. the whole of the probability distribution) has to be constant.
Both weakly stationary and strictly stationary processes will cross their mean
value frequently and will not wander a long way from that mean value.
where t = 1, 2,…, is the trend and ut is a zero mean white noise disturbance
term. This is called deterministic non-stationarity because the source of the
non-stationarity is a deterministic straight line process.
A variable containing a stochastic trend will also not cross its mean value
frequently and will wander a long way from its mean value. A stochastically
non-stationary process could be a unit root or explosive autoregressive
process such as
yt = yt-1 + ut
where 1.
H0 : yt I(1)
H1 : yt I(0)
H0 : = 0
H1 : < 0
(b) The test statistic is given by which equals -0.02 / 0.31 = -0.06
Since this is not more negative than the appropriate critical value, we do not
reject the null hypothesis.
(c) We therefore conclude that there is at least one unit root in the series
(there could be 1, 2, 3 or more). What we would do now is to regress 2yt on
yt-1 and test if there is a further unit root. The null and alternative hypotheses
would now be
If we rejected the null hypothesis, we would therefore conclude that the first
differences are stationary, and hence the original series was I(1). If we did not
reject at this stage, we would conclude that yt must be at least I(2), and we
would have to test again until we rejected.
(d) We cannot compare the test statistic with that from a t-distribution since
we have non-stationarity under the null hypothesis and hence the test statistic
will no longer follow a t-distribution.
3. Using the same regression as above, but on a different set of data, the
researcher now obtains the estimate =-0.52 with standard error = 0.16.
(b) We conclude that the series is stationary since we reject the unit root null
hypothesis. We need do no further tests since we have already rejected.
4. (a) If two or more series are cointegrated, in intuitive terms this implies that
they have a long run equilibrium relationship that they may deviate from in
the short run, but which will always be returned to in the long run. In the
context of spot and futures prices, the fact that these are essentially prices of
the same asset but with different delivery and payment dates, means that
financial theory would suggest that they should be cointegrated. If they were
not cointegrated, this would imply that the series did not contain a common
stochastic trend and that they could therefore wander apart without bound
even in the long run. If the spot and futures prices for a given asset did
separate from one another, market forces would work to bring them back to
follow their long run relationship given by the cost of carry formula.
5. (a) The Johansen test is computed in the following way. Suppose we have p
variables that we think might be cointegrated. First, ensure that all the
variables are of the same order of non-stationary, and in fact are I(1), since it
is very unlikely that variables will be of a higher order of integration. Stack the
variables that are to be tested for cointegration into a p-dimensional vector,
called, say, yt. Then construct a p1 vector of first differences, yt, and form
and estimate the following VAR
Then test the rank of the matrix . If is of zero rank (i.e. all the eigenvalues
are not significantly different from zero), there is no cointegration, otherwise,
the rank will give the number of cointegrating vectors. (You could also go into
a bit more detail on how the eigenvalues are used to obtain the rank.)
(b) Repeating the table given in the question, but adding the null and
alternative hypotheses in each case, and letting r denote the number of
cointegrating vectors:
Considering each row in the table in turn, and looking at the first one first, the
test statistic is greater than the critical value, so we reject the null hypothesis
that there are no cointegrating vectors. The same is true of the second row
(that is, we reject the null hypothesis of one cointegrating vector in favour of
the alternative that there are two). Looking now at the third row, we cannot
reject (at the 5% level) the null hypothesis that there are two cointegrating
vectors, and this is our conclusion. There are two independent linear
combinations of the variables that will be stationary.
The test statistic for testing the validity of these restrictions is given by
T [ln(1 ) ln(1 )]
i r 1
*
i i 2(p-r)
where
(d) There are many applications that could be considered, and tests for PPP,
for cointegration between international bond markets, and tests of the
expectations hypothesis were presented in Sections 7.9, 7.10, and 7.11
respectively. These are not repeated here.
Thus the trace test starts by examining all eigenvalues together to test H 0: r =
0, and if this is not rejected, this is the end and the conclusion would be that
there is no cointegration. If this hypothesis is not rejected, the largest
eigenvalue would be dropped and a joint test conducted using all of the
eigenvalues except the largest to test H 0: r = 1. If this hypothesis is not
rejected, the conclusion would be that there is one cointegrating vector, while
if this is rejected, the second largest eigenvalue would be dropped and the test
statistic recomputed using the remaining g-2 eigenvalues and so on. The
testing sequence would stop when the null hypothesis is not rejected.
The maximal eigenvalue test follows exactly the same testing sequence with
the same null hypothesis as for the trace test, but the max test only considers
one eigenvalue at a time. The null hypothesis that r = 0 is tested using the
largest eigenvalue. If this null is rejected, the null that r = 1 is examined using
the second largest eigenvalue and so on.
(b) The first test of H0: r = 0 is conducted using the first row of the table.
Clearly, the test statistic is greater than the critical value so the null hypothesis
is rejected. Considering the second row, the same is true, so that the null of r =
1 is also rejected. Considering now H 0: r = 2, the test statistic is smaller than
the critical value so that the null is not rejected. So we conclude that there are
2 cointegrating vectors, or in other words 2 linearly independent
combinations of the non-stationary variables that are stationary.