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ME

The Foreign

Exchange Market

(2)

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18-2

Learning Objectives

• Explain how the foreign exchange market

works and why exchange rates are importance.

• Identify the main factors that affect exchange rates in the long run.

• Draw the demand and supply curves for foreign exchange market and interpret the equilibrium in the market for foreign exchange.

• List and illustrate the factors that affect the

exchange rates in the short run.

(3)

Foreign Exchange Market

• Exchange rate: price of one currency in terms of another

• Foreign exchange market: the financial

market where exchange rates are determined

• Spot transaction: immediate (two-day) exchange of bank deposits

– Spot exchange rate

• Forward transaction: the exchange of bank

deposits at some specified future date

(4)

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18-4

Foreign Exchange Market

• Appreciation: a currency rises in value relative to another currency

• Depreciation: a currency falls in value relative to another currency

• When a country’ s currency appreciates, the country’ s goods become more expensive to foreigners and foreign goods in that country become less expensive to domestic economic agents.

• Over-the-counter market mainly banks

(5)

Figure 1 Exchange Rates, 1990–

2014

(6)

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18-6

Exchange Rates in the Long Run

• Law of one price

• Theory of Purchasing Power Parity assumptions:

– All goods are identical in both countries

– Trade barriers and transportation costs are low – Many goods and services are not traded across

borders

(7)

Figure 2 Purchasing Power Parity, United States/United Kingdom, 1973–2014 (Index:

March 1973 = 100.)

(8)

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18-8

Factors That Affect Exchange Rates in the Long Run

• Relative price levels

• Trade barriers

• Preferences for domestic versus foreign goods

• Productivity

(9)

Summary Table 1 Factors That Affect

Exchange Rates in the Long Run

(10)

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18-10

Exchange Rates in the Short Run: A Supply and Demand Analysis

• An exchange rate is the price of domestic assets in terms of foreign assets

• Supply curve for domestic assets

– Assume amount of domestic assets is fixed (supply curve is vertical)

• Demand curve for domestic assets

– Most important determinant is the relative expected return of domestic assets

– At lower current values of the dollar (everything else equal), the quantity demanded of dollar

assets is higher

(11)

Figure 3 Equilibrium in the Foreign

Exchange Market

(12)

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18-12

Explaining Changes in Exchange Rates

• Shifts in the demand for domestic assets – Domestic interest rate

– Foreign interest rate

– Expected future exchange rate

(13)

Figure 4 Response to an Increase in

the Domestic Interest Rate, i D

(14)

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18-14

Figure 5 Response to an Increase in

the Foreign Interest Rate, i F

(15)

Figure 6 Response to an Increase in the

Expected Future Exchange Rate, E e t+1

(16)

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18-16

Summary Table 2 Factors That

Shift the

Demand Curve for Domestic

Assets and Affect the Exchange

Rate

(17)

Application: Effects of Changes in Interest Rates on the Equilibrium Exchange Rate

• Changes in Interest Rates

– When domestic real interest rates raise, the domestic currency appreciates.

– When domestic interest rates rise due to an expected increase in inflation, the domestic currency depreciates.

• Changes in the Money Supply

– A higher domestic money supply causes the

domestic currency to depreciate.

(18)

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18-18

Figure 7 Effect of a Rise in the Domestic Interest

Rate as a Result of an Increase in Expected Inflation

Step 1. A rise in the domestic real interest as a result of an increase in expected inflation shifts the demand curve to the left . . .

Step 2. leading to a fall in the exchange rate.

Exchange Rate, E

t

(euros/$)

E

1

1 S

D

2

D

1

Quantity of Dollar Assets

E

2

2

(19)

Application: Why are Exchange Rates So Volatile?

• The volatility of exchange rates is due, in part, to the fact that they are based on unstable expectations regarding an

uncertain future.

(20)

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Application: The Dollar and Interest Rates

• The value of the dollar and the measure of real interest rates tend to rise and fall together.

• Our model of exchange rate determination

helps explain the rise in the dollar in the early 1980s and fall thereafter.

– a rise in the U.S. real interest rate raises the relative expected return on dollar assets, which leads to

purchases of dollar assets that raise the exchange

rate

(21)

Figure 8 Value of the Dollar and

Interest Rates, 1973–2014

(22)

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18-22

Application: The Global Financial Crisis and the Dollar

• During 2007 interest rates fell in the United States and remained unchanged in Europe.

• The dollar depreciated

• Starting in the summer of 2008 interest rates fell in Europe.

• Increased demand for U.S. Treasuries

“ flight to quality”

• The dollar appreciated

(23)

Appendix: The Interest Parity Condition

• Comparing Expected Returns on Domestic and Foreign Assets

– Since the vast majority of real world transactions in currency markets involve economic agents

buying and selling currencies based on their value as assets, one must develop an

understanding of how these assets are valued.

(24)

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18-24

Appendix: The Interest Parity Condition

• From the perspective of an American

economic agent, the expected return on dollar-denominated assets is equal to the domestic rate of interest.

• For a foreign economic agent, Francois the Foreigner, the expected return on dollar-

denominated assets is equal to the rate of interest associated with those same assets, adjusted for an expected appreciation or

depreciation in the value of the U.S. dollar

relative to the Euro.

(25)

Appendix: The Interest Parity Condition

• If foreign and American bank deposits can be

considered perfect substitutes for one another and capital mobility exists, then parity should exist

between the interest rate on dollar-denominated bank deposits and the interest rate on Euro-denominated bank deposits.

• This notion is summarized in the following equation.

(26)

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The International

Financial System

(27)

Intervention in the Foreign Exchange Market

• Foreign exchange intervention and the money supply

• A central bank’ s purchase of domestic currency and

corresponding sale of foreign assets in the foreign exchange

market leads to an equal decline in its international reserves and the monetary base.

• A central bank’ s sale of domestic currency to purchase foreign

Federal Reserve System Federal Reserve System

Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities

Foreign

Assets -$1B Currency in

circulation -$1B Foreign

Assets -$1B Deposits

with the Fed -$1B (International

Reserves) (International

Reserves) (reserves)

(28)

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Intervention in the Foreign Exchange Market

• Unsterilized foreign exchange intervention:

– An unsterilized intervention in which domestic currency is sold to purchase foreign assets leads to a gain in international reserves, an increase in the money supply, and a depreciation of the

domestic currency

(29)

Figure 1 Effect of an Unsterilized Purchase

of Dollars and Sale of Foreign Assets

(30)

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Intervention in the Foreign Exchange Market

• Sterilized foreign exchange intervention

• To counter the effect of the foreign exchange

intervention, conduct an offsetting open market operation

• There is no effect on the monetary base and no effect on the exchange rate

Federal Reserve System

Assets Liabilities

Foreign Assets Monetary Base

(International Reserves) -$1B (reserves) 0

Government Bonds +$1B

(31)

Balance of Payments

• Current Account

– International transactions that involve currently

produced goods and services

– Trade Balance

• Capital Account

– Net receipts from capital transactions

• Sum of these two is the official reserve transactions

balance

(32)

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Global: Why the Large U.S. Current Account Deficit Worries Economists

• Persistent trade deficits are a concern for several reasons.

• First, it indicates that, at current exchange rates, foreign demand for U.S. exports is far less than U.S. demand for foreign goods.

• Second, a current account deficit means that foreigners’ claims on U.S. assets is

growing.

(33)

Exchange Rate Regimes in the International Financial System

• Fixed exchange rate regime

– Value of a currency is pegged relative to the value of one other currency (anchor currency)

• Floating exchange rate regime

– Value of a currency is allowed to fluctuate against all other currencies

• Managed float regime (dirty float)

– Attempt to influence exchange rates by buying

(34)

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Exchange Rate Regimes in the International Financial System

• Gold standard

– Fixed exchange rates

– No control over monetary policy

– Influenced heavily by production of gold and gold discoveries

• Bretton Woods System

– Fixed exchange rates using U.S. dollar as reserve currency

– International Monetary Fund (IMF)

(35)

Exchange Rate Regimes in the International Financial System

• Bretton Woods System (cont’ d)

– World Bank

– General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)

• World Trade Organization

• European Monetary System

– Exchange rate mechanism

(36)

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Financial Crises in Advanced

Economies

(37)

What is a Financial Crisis?

• A financial crisis occurs when

• there is a particularly large disruption to information flows in financial markets,

• with the result that financial frictions increase sharply and

• financial markets stop functioning.

(38)

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Dynamics of Financial Crises

• Stage One: Initiation of a Financial Crisis

– Credit Boom and Bust: Mismanagement of financial liberalization/innovation leading to asset price boom and bust

– Asset-price Boom and Bust – Increase in Uncertainty

• Stage two: Banking Crisis

• Stage three: Debt Deflation

(39)

Figure 1

Sequence of Events in

Financial

Crises in

Advanced

Economies

(40)

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The Mother of All Financial Crises:

The Great Depression

• How did a financial crisis unfold during the Great Depression and how it led to the worst economic downturn in U.S. history?

• This event was brought on by:

– Stock market crash – Bank panics

– Continuing decline in stock prices

– Debt deflation

(41)

Figure 2 Stock Price Data During

the Great Depression Period

(42)

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18-42

Figure 3 Credit Spreads During the

Great Depression

(43)

Figure 4 Housing Prices and the

Financial Crisis of 2007–2009

(44)

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18-44

Figure 5 Stock Prices and the Financial Crisis of 2007–2009

Source: Dow-Jones Industrial Average (DJIA). Global Financial Data:

http://www.globalfinancialdata.com/index_tabs.php?action=detailedinfo&id=1165.

(45)

Global: The European Sovereign Debt Crisis

• The increase in budget deficits that followed the financial crash of 2007-2009 led to fears of government defaults and a surge in

interest rates.

• The sovereign debt debt, which began in

Greece, moved on to Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy.

• The stresses created by this and related

events continue to threaten the viability of

(46)

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18-46

Figure 6 Credit Spreads and the 2007–2009 Financial Crisis

Source: Dow-Jones Industrial Average (DJIA). Global Financial Data:

http://www.globalfinancialdata.com/index_tabs.php?action=detailedinfo&id=1165.

(47)

Government Intervention and the Recovery

• Short-term Responses and Recovery

– Financial Bailouts: In order to save their financial sectors and to avoid contagion, financial support was provided by many governments to bail out banks, other financial institutions, and even the so-called “too-big-to-fail” firms that were

severely affected by the financial crisis.

– Fiscal Stimulus Spending: To boost their

individual economies, most governments used

fiscal stimulus packages that combined

(48)

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Government Intervention and the Recovery (contd.)

• Short-term Responses and Recovery

– Japan’s consecutive stimulus packages, totaling

$568 billion, were among the highest during the crisis, but these proved largely ineffective

– European nations showed moderate success.

(49)

Financial Crises in Emerging

Economies

(50)

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Dynamics of Financial Crisis in Emerging Market Economies

• Stage one: Initial Phase

– Path A: Credit Boom and Bust

• Weak supervision and lack of expertise leads to a lending boom.

• Domestic banks borrow from foreign banks.

• Fixed exchange rates give a sense of lower risk.

• Banks play a more important role in emerging market economies, since securities markets are not well

developed yet.

(51)

Dynamics of Financial Crisis in Emerging Market Economies

• Stage one: Initial Phase

– Path B: Severe Fiscal Imbalances

• Governments in need of funds sometimes force banks to buy government debt.

• When government debt loses value, banks lose and their net worth decreases.

– Additional factors:

• Increase in interest rates (from abroad)

• Asset price decrease

• Uncertainty linked to unstable political systems

(52)

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Dynamics of Financial Crisis in Emerging Market Economies

• Stage two: Currency Crisis

– Deterioration of bank balance sheets triggers currency crises:

• Government cannot raise interest rates (doing so forces banks into insolvency)…

• … and speculators expect a devaluation.

– Severe fiscal imbalances triggers currency crises:

• Foreign and domestic investors sell the domestic

currency.

(53)

Dynamics of Financial Crisis in Emerging Market Economies

• Stage three: Full-Fledged Financial Crisis

– The debt burden in terms of domestic currency increases (net worth decreases).

– Increase in expected and actual inflation reduces firms’ cash flow.

– Banks are more likely to fail:

• Individuals are less able to pay off their debts (value of assets fall).

• Debt denominated in foreign currency increases (value

of liabilities increase).

(54)

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Figure 7

Sequence of Events in

Emerging Market

Financial

Crises

(55)

Application: Crisis in South Korea, 1997-98

• Financial liberalization and globalization mismanaged

• Perversion of the financial liberalization and globalization process: chaebols and the

South Korean crisis

• Stock market decline and failure of firms increase uncertainty

• Adverse selection and moral hazard

(56)

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Application: Crisis in South Korea, 1997-98

• Currency crisis ensues

• Final stage: currency crisis triggers full- fledged financial crisis

• Recovery commences

(57)

Application: The Argentine Financial Crisis, 2001-2002

• Severe fiscal imbalances

• Adverse selection and moral hazard problems worsen

• Bank panic begins

• Currency crisis ensues

• Currency crisis triggers full-fledged financial crisis

• Recovery begins

(58)

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Global: When an Advanced Economy Is Like an Emerging Market Economy: The Icelandic

Financial Crisis of 2008

• The financial crisis and economic contraction in Iceland that started in 2008 followed the script of a financial crisis in an emerging

market economy, even though Iceland is a wealthy nation.

• Financial liberalization led to rising stock market values and currency mismatch.

• Foreign capital fled the country as a severe

recession developed.

(59)

Preventing emerging market financial crises

• Beef up prudential regulation and supervision of banks

• Encourage disclosure and market-based discipline

• Limit currency mismatch

• Sequence financial liberalization

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