Browsing by Subject "Yield curve"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Open Access Forecasting interest rates using shifting endpoints in small open economies: evidence from Canada and the UK(Bilkent University, 2022-06) Ata, İbrahimThis thesis examines the forecasting performance of widely used interest rate forecasting methods for small open economies such as Canada and the UK. In particular, I run a horse race between standard models and the models using shifting endpoints to see whether results for the US extends to small open economies. In this setup, three time-varying parameters, interpreted as factors corresponding to level, slope and curvature, are allowed to have shifting long-run means rather than a constant mean. The shifting endpoints are introduced by exponential smoothing of factors, and the connection of factors with certain macroeconomic variables and inflation expectations. In comparison to the random walk benchmark, allowing for shifting endpoints in yield curve factors offers significant gains in out-of-sample forecasting accuracy. Moreover, results suggest that there is a strong evidence that the US as a global economy has a spillover effect on the term structure of interest rates of Canada and the UK.Item Open Access The U.S. Treasury yield curve: 1961 to the present(Elsevier BV, 2007) Gürkaynak, R. S.; Sack, B.; Wright, J. H.The discount function, which determines the value of all future nominal payments, is the most basic building block of finance and is usually inferred from the Treasury yield curve. It is therefore surprising that researchers and practitioners do not have available to them a long history of high-frequency yield curve estimates. This paper fills that void by making public the Treasury yield curve estimates of the Federal Reserve Board at a daily frequency from 1961 to the present. We use a well-known and simple smoothing method that is shown to fit the data very well. The resulting estimates can be used to compute yields or forward rates for any horizon. We hope that the data, which are posted on the website http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2006 and which will be updated quarterly, will provide a benchmark yield curve that will be useful to applied economists. © 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.