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UNDERSTANDING

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Title: Kein Folientitel Author: Professor Dr. Paul Bernd Spahn Last modified by: xx Created Date: 12/1/1997 1:32:44 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: UNDERSTANDING


1
Lecture 5
  • UNDERSTANDING
  • EXCHANGE RATES (2)

2
A typical trading desk for spot forex
3
Volatility USD/EUR, tick chart
4
Exchange rates in the short run
  • The theory of the long-run behavior of exchange
    rates cannot explain the large changes of current
    (spot) exchange rates.
  • In order to understand the short-run behavior, we
    have to recognize that the exchange rate reflects
    the price of domestic bank deposits (in )
    denominated in terms of foreign bank deposits (in
    ).

5
Comparing expected returns across nations
  • We consider Euroland the home country, and the
    domestic currency .
  • The USA are the foreign country with the
    foreign currency .

Euro deposits bearan interest rate i.
Dollar deposits bearan interest rate i.
How does Hans, the European, compare the return
on dollar deposits abroadwith the return on
domesticinvestments in ?
6
Comparing expected returns across nations
  • If Hans invests in the USA, he must realize that
    his return in terms of is not i. He must
    adjust the return for any expected
    appreciation/depreciation of the against the .
  • If -deposits bring an interest rate of i 5
    p.a., and the dollar is expected to depreciate
    by 10 p.a. (w / ?), the expected return in
     is 5 - 10 -5.

7
Comparing expected returns across nations
  • More formally

8
Comparing expected returns across nations
  • If Bill invests in Euroland, he must realize
    that his return in terms of is not i. He
    must adjust the return for any expected
    appreciation/depreciation of the against the
    .
  • If -deposits bring an interest rate of i 3
    p.a., and the euro is expected to appreciate by
    10 p.a. (w / ? ), then the expected return
    is 3 10 13.

9
Comparing expected returns across nations
  • More formally

10
The key point
  • RET and RET are symmetrical (with opposite
    sign)

As the relative expected return on -deposits
increases, both domestic and foreign
residentsrespond in the same way they want to
holdmore -deposits and fewer deposits in .
11
Interest parity condition
  • At present, international capital markets are
    relatively open. There are few impediments to the
    flow of capital, and and have similar
    liquidity and risk.
  • When capital is mobile and bank deposits are
    perfect substitutes, the expected return must
    become identical

12
Why? Arbitrage and liquidity trading
  • Whenever there emerge small differences between
    interest rates and/or changes of expectations on
    the exchange rate, there will be arbitrage in
    international money markets that evens out the
    differential between domestic and foreign returns
    denominated in one currency gt Interest parity
    condition

13
Market adjustment Examples
  • We assume i 10, and wet1 1 /.
  • When wt 1.0 /, the expected appreciation/
    depreciation of the   0 and the expected
    return in is then equal to i 10 (Point B).
  • When wt 0.95 /, ?wet 0.052 5.2, and the
    expected return in 4.8 (Point A).
  • When wt 1.05 /, ?wet -0.048 -4.8, and the
    expected return in 14.8 (Point C).

14
Equilibrium in forex markets
wt (/)
RET
RET
1.05
C
1.00
B
0.95
A
10
5.2
14.8
Expected return ()
15
What happens in disequilibrium
  • When w ? 1.0, there is a market reaction
  • w gt 1 People will try to sell and buy .gt
    Selling and buying
  • But no one holding will sell at that price,
    there is excess supply of eurosi.e. the
    price of -deposits relative to -deposits must
    fall.
  • The amount of dollars per euro falls, the euro
    depreciates.

16
What happens in disequilibrium
  • When
  • w lt 1 People will try to sell and buy .gt
    Selling and buying
  • But no one holding will sell at that price,
    there is excess supply of dollarsi.e. the
    price of -deposits relative to -deposits must
    fall.
  • The amount of dollars per euro increases, the
    euro appreciates.

17
Change in the foreign interest rate
  • If the foreign interest rate increases, the
    expected return RET also increases.
  • This leads to a depreciation of the euro.
  • The same is true if the expected return on dollar
    deposits increases (at the original equilibrium
    exchange rate).

18
Equilibrium in forex markets
wt (/)
RET
RET
RET
wB
B
C
wC
iD
Expected return ()
19
Change in the domestic interest rate
  • An increase in the domestic interest rate raises
    the expected return on euro deposits, shifts the
    RET schedule to the right, and leads to a rise
    in the exchange rate.
  • It creates an excess demand for -deposits at
    the original exchange rate, and this leads to an
    appreciation of the .

20
Equilibrium in forex markets
wt (/)
RET
RET
RET
wC
C
wB
B
iC
iB
Expected return ()
21
What about inflation ?
  • If we assume that rational investors ask for a
    compensation for the erosion of a nominal value
    due to inflation, i.e. the Fisher equation
    holds, we have to be more specific
  • Expected inflation-rate differentials are
    embedded in nominal interest rates, and hence in
    the nominal exchange rate.
  • On top of the inflation-rate differential, the
    exchange rate reacts to differentials in the
    real interest rate.

22
Factors that affect the exchange rate
Change invariable
Exchange rate change
Domestic interest rate
Foreign interest rate
Price expectations (D/F)
Expected import demand
Expected export demand
Expected productivity (D/F)
23
The analysis of forex markets
24
Volume of forex transactions, in bill.
Daily, month of April
25
Forex turnover by currency pairs (in per cent)
26
Forex transactions by market place (April 2001)
27
Actors in forex markets
28
The forex market is highly concentrated
29
And will be concentrated even more
  • Since September 2002 the forex market has
    changed The CLS Bank started operating. It
    highly concentrates forex dealings due to a new
    technology.
  • On October 29th, the CLS Bank settled 15,200
    transactions, totaling 395 billion, which
    required only 17 billion of payments between
    member banks, a 95 reduction.

30
Short and long run the /DEM-market
31
Short and long run the /-market
32
Pound sterling during the 1992 crisis
  • Mastertextformat bearbeiten
  • Zweite Ebene
  • Dritte Ebene
  • Vierte Ebene
  • Fünfte Ebene

33
The Asian crisis 1997-98
34
The crisis of the Argentinian peso
35
Systemic stability of the financial sector
36
Factors driving the financial sector
  • The financial system is in a continuing flux
    driven by transactions costs motives.
  • The developments of forex markets demonstrate the
    importance of cost reduction.
  • The strategies are
  • Bundling of funds (economies of scale)
  • Risk reduction through diversification
  • Explicit Hedging
  • Expertise (legal, technological)

37
Information inefficiencies
  • Market participants can have insufficient
    information about their counterparts (asymmetric
    information). It leads to
  • Adverse selection. This is an information problem
    occurring before the transactionPotential bad
    credit risks are those who seek loans most
    actively.
  • Moral hazard. This occurs after the trans-action
    Borrowers may take on big risks.

38
Adverse selection The lemons problem
  • A lemon is a bad car purchased second hand.
  • Akerlof studied the used-car market and found an
    asymmetric information problem
  • Potential buyers cant tell a lemon from a good
    car.
  • They offer an average price,between the value of
    a lemon and a good car.

George Akerlof 1940, Nobel Prize 2001
39
The lemons problem
  • The owner of a used car knows whether the car is
    good or bad.
  • If the car is a lemon, he is of course happy to
    sell at the average price.
  • If the car is good, the owner has little
    incentive to sell at average prices.
  • Transaction volumes are low and the market may
    even break down.
  • Similar problems arise in the securities markets
    (bonds, and stocks).
  • An investor will only pay a price that reflects
    the average quality of firms.
  • Bad firms are happy to take loans from investors.
  • Good firms are not willing to borrow on this
    market.

40
Moral hazard in equity contract (1)
  • Equity contracts (shares) are subject to a
    particular principal-agent problem.
  • Stockholders (principals) are not the same as
    managers (agents). This separation involves moral
    hazard because managers may act in their own
    interest.
  • Example Steve has an ice-cream shop, and you
    become his silent partner. The capital is shared
    at 1090. Profits are also shared in these
    proportions.

41
Moral hazard in equity contract (2)
  • Option 1 Steve works hard and provides good
    service, but earns only 10 or the profit.
  • Option 2 Steve does not provide good service,
    and uses the capital to buy artwork for his
    office, a luxury car for business he thus
    acquires fringe benefits at your expense.
  • Option 3 Steve is not only a poor manager, but
    also dishonest. In this case the moral hazard
    problem may become extreme.

42
Elimination of asymmetric information (1)
  • A first solution to the problem is the private
    production and sale of information.
  • There are professional rating agencies (Standard
    and Poors, Moodys, Value Line), and you can set
    up costly monitoring and auditing (state
    verification) of the firm.
  • But there is s free-rider problem to this. If
    you buy a security, people my simply copy your
    behavior without paying for the information.
  • This erodes potential extra profits, and you may
    not have bought the information in the first
    place.

43
Elimination of asymmetric information (2)
  • A second possibility could be to involve the
    government in regulating the market.
  • The objective is to make firms reveal honest
    information by adhering to standard accounting
    practices and to disclose pertinent information.
  • Government can also impose stiff criminal
    penalties to contain fraud.
  • Government regulation may ease the asymmetric
    information problems, but it is difficult to
    eliminate them totally.

44
Elimination of asymmetric information (3)
  • A third solution is to involve financial
    intermediaries as experts in the production of
    information.
  • A private loan is not traded, so others cannot
    watch and imitate (no free rider).
  • This explains why indirect finance is more
    important than direct finance.
  • Larger firms (because they are better known)
    obtain easier access to capital markets than
    smaller firms.

45
Systemic instability and financial crises
  • Financial crises are characterized by abrupt
    declines in asset prices and by insolvencies of
    financial and non-financial firms.
  • Such crises are reoccurring in many countries.
    They are caused by a sharp increase in adverse
    selection and moral hazard problems.
  • Four categories of factors trigger crises
  • Increases in interest rates
  • Increases in uncertainty
  • Asset market effects on balance sheets and
  • (Multiple) bank failures.

46
Asset market effects on balance sheets
  • Balance sheets have important repercussions on
    the financial system
  • A deterioration (fall in stock or housing prices)
    of the balance sheet reduces the net worth of a
    firm.
  • Lenders are less willing to lend because of
    reduced collateral.
  • This induces moral hazard because borrowers take
    higher risks.
  • The increase in moral hazard makes lending less
    attractive this reduces economic activity.

47
Typical financial crises
Increase inuncertainty
Stock marketdecline
Increase ininterest rates
Deterioration of a banks balance sheet
Adverse selection andmoral hazard problems worsen
Economic activity declines
Bank panic
Adverse selection andmoral hazard problems worsen
Economic activity declines
48
The stock market and speculative frenzies
  • Stock markets have indeed often created havoc to
    the economy and to peoples life
  • Early example the tulip bubble in the
    Netherlands (approximately 1620 to 1637)

49
The tulip boom
  • The boom involved rare tulips
  • Bulb prices rose steadily throughout the 1630s,
    as ever more speculators wedged into the market.
  • In 1633, a farmhouse in Hoorn changed hands for
    three bulbs
  • In 1637 the bubble stretched . and burst !!

50
Precedents of the crisis
  • The basis of the bubble was an economic boom
    caused by shocking new technologies (Amsterdam
    merchants were at the center of the new and
    lucrative East Indies trade)
  • But enabling the bubble was leveraged through
    credit, future contracts, and an innovative
    climate of Dutch finance (that coined new
    instruments such as options)
  • Did the burst of the bubble drag down the Dutch
    economy?

51
Financial crisisThe US stock market 1871-1914
  • Financial crises have been frequent and
    persistent throughout economic history

52
What causes stock market volatility?
  • Financial crises exhibit a similar pattern
  • Promising novel technologies or markets
  • A psychologically boosted investment frenzy
  • Financial leverage and concentration of
    resources into an emerging segment of the
    economy
  • Over-expansion of a sector and its bust
  • Contagion of the overall economy

53
Examples
  • This pattern was typical for
  • The railway frenzy of the mid-19th century
  • The initiation of electrical appliances at the
    turn of the last century
  • But the best analyzed event in economic history
    is the one following the expansion of the
    roaring 1920s ..

54
How do financial bubbles affect activity?
  • The NY stock market crashed on Friday, October
    1929, initiating a persistent and long downturn
    of the economy

55
Development of Stock Market Index
56
Repercussions on the real economy
57
Impact on peoples lives
  • Top CEOs had a especially hard time !

58
What dragged the economy down?
  • The impact was then
  • Increase of personal savings (and hence a
    reduction of consumer spending) due to a
    perceived reduction of personal wealth
  • Change in consumer behavior due to higher
    unemployment
  • Credit implosion with an induced reduction of
    demand, notably fixed investment
  • Reduction of housing investment due to prior
    over-investment

59
The Great Depression Further problems
  • And
  • A general loss in consumers and investors
    confidence
  • Change in spending behavior due to insolvencies
    and bankruptcies
  • Disintermediation due to a lack of liquidity
  • Negative impact on public investment due to a
    fall in tax revenue
  • Policy failures, e.g. strategic trade policies
    (Smoot-Hawley Act)

60
The Great Depression US imports
November
Monthly data. Imports from 75 Countries (in bill.
Gold )
January
February
December
March
November
April
October
May
September
June
August
July
61
The Great Depression Monetary policy
  • Policy failure of central banking
  • Reduction in the supply of money
  • High real interest rates
  • Failure of financial institutions

Anna Schwartz
Milton Friedman
62
What have we learned since?
  • Social protection, especially of the old and the
    unemployed
  • Consolidation of financial sector to avoid credit
    implosion, insolvency and break-downs
  • Fiscal and monetary management
  • International institutions to provide
    international means of payment (IMF) and to
    protect free trade (WTO)
  • International cooperation and integration
  • And in particular ..

63
Our leaders are much brighter !!
64
  • Today we are technically more advanced and
    smarter than our grandparents!

However animal spirits are persistent and
remain
65
Irrational exuberance A bubble that will burst!
66
and it did!
67
The central bank and systemic stability
  • The health of the economy and the effectiveness
    of monetary policy depend on a sound financial
    system. Through supervising and regulating
    financial institutions, the ECB is better able to
    make policy decisions.
  • But should it intervene?
  • Rescue failing banks?
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