"Stock Prices and Exchange Rates in the EU and the United States: Evidence on Their Interaction"@en . "1"^^ . . "Ceny akci\u00ED a m\u011Bnov\u00E9 kurzy v EU a USA: Empirick\u00FD d\u016Fkaz jejich vz\u00E1jemn\u00FDch interakc\u00ED"@cs . . "RIV/47813059:19520/05:00000006!RIV06-GA0-19520___" . "Finance a \u00FAv\u011Br - Czech Journal of Economics and Finance" . "20"^^ . "141;161" . . . "544754" . "[25BC14DC22E4]" . "0015-1920" . "RIV/47813059:19520/05:00000006" . "3-4" . . "STAV\u00C1REK, Daniel" . "Stock Prices and Exchange Rates in the EU and the United States: Evidence on Their Interaction" . . . "19520" . . "Ceny akci\u00ED a m\u011Bnov\u00E9 kurzy v EU a USA: Empirick\u00FD d\u016Fkaz jejich vz\u00E1jemn\u00FDch interakc\u00ED"@cs . "Stock Prices and Exchange Rates in the EU and the United States: Evidence on Their Interaction" . . . . "55" . . "Stock Prices and Exchange Rates in the EU and the United States: Evidence on Their Interaction"@en . . "P(GA402/02/1408)" . . "1"^^ . "stock prices, exchange rates, cointegration, vector error correction, Granger causality"@en . "This paper investigates the nature of the causal relationship between stock prices and effective exchange rates in four old EU-member countries, four new EU-member countries, and in the USA. The results show much stronger causality in countries with developed capital and foreign exchange markets than in the new-comes. Causalities seem to be predominantly unidirectional with a direction running from stock prices to exchange rates." . "This paper investigates the nature of the causal relationship between stock prices and effective exchange rates in four old EU-member countries, four new EU-member countries, and in the USA. The results show much stronger causality in countries with deve"@cs . . "CZ - \u010Cesk\u00E1 republika" . "This paper investigates the nature of the causal relationship between stock prices and effective exchange rates in four old EU-member countries, four new EU-member countries, and in the USA. The results show much stronger causality in countries with developed capital and foreign exchange markets than in the new-comes. Causalities seem to be predominantly unidirectional with a direction running from stock prices to exchange rates."@en . . .