Special finance job talk seminar
A Tale of Two Volatilities: Sectoral Uncertainty, Growth, and Asset-Prices
Gill Segal ,The Wharton School
Abstract: What is the impact of higher technological volatility on asset-prices and macroeconomic aggregates? I find the answer hinges on its sectoral origin. I document several novel empirical facts: Volatility that originates from the consumption sector plays the ``traditional'' role of depressing the real economy and stock prices, whereas volatility that originates from the investment sector boosts prices and growth; Investment (consumption) sector's technological volatility has a positive (negative) market-price of risk; Investment sector's technological volatility helps explain return spreads based on momentum, past profitability, and Tobin's Q. I show that a standard DSGE two-sector model fails to fully explain these findings, while a model that features monopolistic power for firms and sticky prices, as well as early resolution of uncertainty, can quantitatively explain the differential impact of sectoral volatilities on real and financial variables. In all, the sectoral decomposition of volatility can reconcile existing competing evidence related to the impact of volatility shocks.