In what follows all processes referred to are weakly stationary. Let
us call the real part of a complex ARMA(p,q) process a
Re CARMA(p,q) process. Every real
ARMA(p,q) process can trivially be written as a Re
CARMA(p,q) process. Provided the moment properties of
complex linear processes are appropriately specified, the following
inverse result is available: every Re CARMA(p,q) process
is spectrally equivalent to a real ARMA(2p,p +
q) process or some simpler process. Thus the ARMA and Re CARMA
classes are spectrally equivalent. The question of whether an ARMA or a Re
CARMA parametrization is better in a given context then arises. If
cyclicality is present, and especially if we wish to treat cycles, growth,
and decay together, in a model whose parameters are easy to interpret,
then a Re CARMA approach may be helpful.The
author thanks Paolo Paruolo, A.M. Robert Taylor, and an anonymous referee
for helpful suggestions.