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The Foreign Exchange Market

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Title: The Foreign Exchange Market


1
The Foreign Exchange Market
  • International Corporate Finance
  • P.V. Viswanath

2
Market Organization
  • The forex market is an electronically linked
    network of banks, forex brokers and dealers.
  • Trading is done by phone, telex or SWIFT (Society
    for Worldwide Interbank Financial
    Telecommunications), an international
    bank-communications network.
  • The purpose of the market is to permit transfers
    of purchasing power denominated in one currency
    to another.

3
Market Organization
  • The interbank market is a wholesale market in
    which major banks trade with each other.
  • In the spot market, currencies trade for
    immediately delivery (within 2 business days).
  • In the forward market, contracts are made to buy
    and sell for future delivery.
  • The swap market involves packages of spot and
    forward contracts.

4
Participants
  • Foreign Exchange Brokers specialists in
    matching net supplier and demander banks.
  • Arbitrageurs seek to earn risk-free profits by
    taking advantage of differences in interest rates
    among countries
  • Traders use forward contracts to eliminate or
    cover the risk of loss on export or import orders
    denominated in foreign currencies.
  • Hedgers (mostly multinationals) engage in forward
    contracts to protect the home currency value of
    various foreign currency-denominated assets and
    liabilities
  • Speculators expose themselves to currency risk in
    order to profit from exchange rate fluctuations.

5
Clearing System
  • Most electronic funds transfers involving
    international transactions take place through the
    Clearing House Interbank Payments System (CHIPS),
    a computerized network developed by the New York
    Clearing House Association. Most large US banks
    and US branches of foreign banks are members of
    CHIPS.
  • At the beginning of the day, each bank puts in a
    security deposit into (prefunds) its CHIPS
    account.
  • Interbank transfers during the day are processed
    electronically through CHIPS.
  • At the end of the day, all CHIPS member bank
    balances are netted out and their balances
    remitted back to them using Fedwire.

6
How Fedwire Works
  • The Fedwire system is used by the Feds member
    banks to make interbank transactions. CHIPS is a
    clearing system, while Fedwire is a mechanism to
    accomplish any interbank transaction.
  • In a typical funds transfer, an individual or a
    business instructs its bank to send a funds
    transfer.
  • The sending bank debits the sender's account and
    initiates a fedwire funds transfer.
  • The Federal Reserve, in turn, debits the account
    of the sending bank and credits the account of
    the receiving bank the Fed notifies the
    receiving bank about the transfer.
  • The receiving bank credits the recipient's
    account and notifies the recipient of the receipt
    of the funds. The transfer is final when the
    funds are received. Funds can be used by the
    recipient immediately thereafter.

7
How CHIPS Works
8
Spot Quotations Direct and Indirect
  • Direct quotation home currency price of the
    foreign currency quoted. In the US, this would
    be equivalent to quoting in
  • American terms (no. of US per unit of foreign
    currency). e.g. on 6/2/04, 1.2216 per . This
    would be an indirect quote in Europe.
  • Indirect quotation foreign currency price of
    the home currency. In the US, this would be
    equivalent to quoting in
  • European terms (no. of units of foreign currency
    per ). e.g. on 6/2/04, 0.8186 per . This
    would be a direct quote in Europe.

9
Bid-ask spread
  • The bid price of a security is the price which
    the person quoting (e.g. a dealer) is willing to
    pay for it the price at which anybody can sell
    it.
  • The ask price is the price at which the dealer is
    willing to sell it the price at which anybody
    can buy it.
  • The bid-ask spread is the difference.
  • The direct (American) quote for the euro on
    6/2/04 was 1.2262 -67, i.e. you could buy a for
    1.2267 (ask), but if you wanted to sell it, you
    could get only 1.2262.
  • The spread is 0.0005 per .
  • The percentage spread is 100(Ask-Bid)/Ask
    100(0.0005)/1.2267 0.04

10
Cross rates
  • Most currencies are quoted against the dollar
    hence it may be necessary to work out the cross
    rates for currencies other than the dollar.
  • For example, the euro was quoted on 6/2/04 at
    1.2208 -12 (direct), while the yen was quoted at
    109.99 -04 (indirect).
  • A Japanese trader who wants to buy the euro
    would, implicitly be buying the dollar for yen
    and then trading the dollar for euros.
  • 100 yen would buy (100/110.04) or 0.9088 this
    could be used to buy 0.9088/1.2212 0.7442
  • 1 would buy 1.2208, which would buy
    1.2208(109.99) 134.28 yen to buy 100 yen, you
    would need 100/134.28 0.7447.
  • Hence the (indirect) cross quote in Japan would
    be 0.7442 -7.

11
Currency Arbitrage
  • If traders quote currencies in terms of more than
    one base currency, the possibility exists that
    the different quotes may be inconsistent.
  • Thus, if one dealer quotes the dollar against the
    and the same or another dealer quotes against
    the yen, and there is also a dollar quote against
    the yen, then consistency requires that the cross
    dollar-yen quote equal the direct dollar-yen
    quote.
  • If it doesnt, the possibility of making money by
    trading against these dealers exists, assuming
    that the discrepancy is sufficiently large to
    outweigh the bid-ask spreads in the two
    transactions.

12
Currency Arbitrage
  • Suppose the pound is bid at 1.5422 in New York
    and the euro is offered at 0.9251 in Frankfurt
    and simultaneously, the pound is quoted at
    1.6650, ask, in London.
  • An arbitrageur can sell 1 for 1.5422 in New
    York, buy 1.5422/0.9251 1.6671 with the
    dollars in Frankfurt, and finally buy
    1.6671/1.6650 1.0012391 with the euros, in
    London for a profit of 0.124.

13
Currency Arbitrage
14
Settlement risk
  • Settlement risk is the risk that a settlement in
    a transfer system does not take place as
    expected.
  • This can happen if one party defaults on its
    clearing obligations to one or more
    counterparties.
  • Settlement risk comprises both credit and
    liquidity risks. The former arises when a
    counterparty cannot meet an obligation for full
    value on due date and thereafter because it is
    insolvent.
  • Liquidity risk refers to the risk that a
    counterparty will not settle for full value at
    due date but could do so at some unspecified time
    thereafter, causing the party which did not
    receive its expected payment to have to finance
    the shortfall at short notice.

15
The Case of Bankhaus Herstatt
  • On 26th June 1974 the Bundesaufsichtsamt für das
    Kreditwesen withdrew the banking licence of
    Bankhaus Herstatt, a small bank in Cologne active
    in the FX market, and ordered it into liquidation
    during the banking day but after the close of the
    interbank payments system in Germany.
  • Prior to the announcement of Herstatt's closure,
    several of its counterparties had, through their
    branches or correspondents, irrevocably paid
    Deutsche Mark to Herstatt on that day through the
    German payments system against anticipated
    receipts of US dollars later the same day in New
    York in respect of maturing spot and forward
    transactions.

16
The Case of Bankhaus Herstatt
  • Upon the termination of Herstatt's business at
    10.30 a.m. New York time on 26th June (3.30 p.m.
    in Frankfurt), Herstatt's New York correspondent
    bank suspended outgoing US dollar payments from
    Herstatt's account.
  • This action left Herstatt's counterparty banks
    exposed for the full value of the Deutsche Mark
    deliveries made (credit risk and liquidity risk).
  • Moreover, banks which had entered into forward
    trades with Herstatt not yet due for settlement
    lost money in replacing the contracts in the
    market (replacement risk), and others had
    deposits with Herstatt (traditional counterparty
    credit risk). (Source http//riskinstitute.ch/140
    960.htm)

17
The BCCI case, 1991
  • An institution in London was due to settle on 5th
    July 1991 a dollar/sterling foreign exchange
    transaction into which it had entered two days
    previously with BCCI SA, London.
  • The sterling payment was duly made in London on
    5th July. BCCI had sent a message to its New York
    correspondent on 4th July (a public holiday in
    the United States) to make the corresponding US
    dollar payment for value on 5th July. The payment
    message was delayed beyond the time of the
    correspondent bank's initial release of payments
    (at 7 a.m.) by the operation of a bilateral
    credit limit placed on BCCI's correspondent by
    the recipient CHIPS member.

18
The BCCI case, 1991
  • The payment remained in the queue until shortly
    before 4 p.m. (New York time), when it was
    cancelled by BCCI's correspondent, shortly after
    the correspondent had received a message from
    BCCI's provisional liquidators in London on the
    subject of the action it should take with regard
    to payment instructions from BCCI London. In this
    way, BCCI's counterparty lost the principal
    amount of the contract.
  • A major Japanese bank also suffered a principal
    loss in respect of a dollar/yen deal due for
    settlement on 5th July, since yen had been paid
    to BCCI SA Tokyo that day, through the Foreign
    Exchange Yen Clearing System, and the assets of
    BCCI SA in New York State were frozen before
    settlement of the US dollar leg of the
    transaction took place.

19
The BCCI case, 1991
  • The UK institution's loss illustrates a
    particular aspect of the difficulties which face
    the private sector under current circumstances in
    any attempt to coordinate the timing of payments
    in this instance, the loss would almost certainly
    not have occurred but for the measures in place
    to reduce risk domestically within CHIPS (the
    bilateral credit limit).
  • Moreover, the closure of BCCI by the banking
    supervisors illustrates that it is generally not
    possible to close a bank which is active in the
    foreign exchange market at a time when all the
    relevant payments systems have settled all its
    transactions due on a given day. In this case,
    the closure required the Luxembourg Court to
    appoint a liquidator, an action which under
    Luxembourg law can take place only within the
    normal business day of the Court.

20
Forward Exchange Rates
  • The forward exchange rate is the rate that is
    contracted today for the exchange of currencies
    at a specified rate in the future.
  • A contract for such a simple exchange is an
    outright forward contract.
  • A swap contract is a combination of a spot
    contract and a forward contract
  • A swap-in Canadian is an agreement to buy
    Canadian dollars spot and sell Canadian dollars
    forward.
  • A swap-out is the reverse.
  • A forward-forward involves two forward contracts
    of different maturities.

21
Hedging with Forwards
  • The forward market can be used to hedge foreign
    exchange risk.
  • Suppose a US company buys textiles from England
    with payment of 1 m. due in 90 days. The
    importer is implicitly short pounds. If the
    pound were to rally during the next 90 days, the
    importer would lose out he would have to pay a
    larger amount in dollars.
  • He could go long in the forward market, i.e., buy
    pounds for forward delivery in 90 days.
  • Suppose he can negotiate a forward rate of 1.72
    per 1. In 90 days, the bank will give him 1m.
    and he will give the bank 1.72m., irrespective
    of how the exchange rate changes.
  • Implicitly, his loss/gain in the forward market
    is offset by his gain/loss in the spot market.

22
Hedging with Forwards
23
Forward Market Transactions
  • If the actual price is quoted, its called an
    outright quote.
  • In the interbank market, the forward rate is
    quoted as a discount/premium from the spot. This
    is called the swap rate. The difference is known
    as points.
  • On 6/2/04, the spot GBP/USD quote was 1.8350/
    1.8355 on Moneyline.
  • The one-year forward rate was quoted as
    -536.25/-533.25
  • This implies an outright quote of
    (1.8350-.053625)/ (1.8355-.053325) or 1.781375/
    1.782175.

24
Forward rates
On June 2, 2004, the GBP/USD spot rate was
1.8302/1.8323 and the forward rates on
www.ozforex.com.au were
We can compute the implied forward discount as
(forward spot)/spot x (360/days).Hence the
3-month pound bid is quoted at a discount of
3.33, since (1.81509-1.8302)/ 1.8302x(360/90)
-0.033
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