FIN-02-043 |
NYU Stern School of Business |
Do Asset Prices Reflect Fundamentals?
Freshly Squeezed Evidence from the FCOJ Market
June 2002
Jacob Boudoukh, Matthew Richardson, YuQing Shen and Robert F. Whitelaw
ABSTRACT
This paper reexamines frozen concentrated orange juice (FCOJ) futures returns as they relate
to fundamentals, in particular, temperature. We show that when theory clearly identities the
fundamental, i.e., at temperatures close to or below freezing, there is a close link between FCOJ
prices and that fundamental. Using a simple theoretical nonlinear model of the relation between
FCOJ returns and temperature, we can explain approximately 50% of the return variation. This is
important because while only 4.5% of the days in winter coincide with freezing temperatures, two-
thirds of the entire winter return variability occurs on these days. Moreover, when theory suggests
no such relation, i.e., at most temperature levels, we show empirically that none exists. The fact
that there is no relation the majority of the time is good news for the theory and market efficiency,
not bad news. In terms of other FCOJ return volatility, we also show that other fundamental
information about supply, such as USDA production forecasts and news about Brazil production,
generate significant return variation that is consistent with theoretical predictions. The evidence
in this paper suggests that the literature's conclusion about irrationality drawn from the FCOJ
market have more to do with econometricians' lack of modeling ability than with the empirical
facts.
Jacob Boudoukh
Institution: Stern School of Business, New York University, 44 West 4th Street, New York, NY 10012
Telephone: (212) 998-0305
Fax: (212) 995-4233
Email: JBoudouk@stern.nyu.edu
Homepage:http://www.stern.nyu.edu/~jboudouk
Matthew Richardson
Institution: Stern School of Business, New York University, 44 West 4th Street, New York, NY 10012
Email: mrichar0@stern.nyu.edu
Homepage:http://www.stern.nyu.edu/~mrichar0
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