Title: ECONOMICS 3150B Lecture 3 September 23, 2004
1ECONOMICS 3150BLecture 3September 23, 2004
2Links between Spot and Forward Rates
- Covered interest rate parity
- Invest C1 for one year in Government of Canada
bond at interest rate of R(1,C) 1 1R(1,C) ?
C - Invest C1 for one year in US Government bond at
interest rate of R(1, US) 1E1R(1,US) ? US
? convert into C at end of year at spot exchange
rate at that time (speculate) or enter into
forward contract at beginning of year at forward
rate of F - For investor to be indifferent between two
investments and not speculate 1R(1,C)
E1R(1,US) /F - ? R(1,C) E1R(1,US) F/F ? R(1,US)
(E-F)/F ? R(1,US) (F-E)/E - Covered return
- Forward premium on C when F gt E ? R(1,US) gt
R(1,C) - Forward discount on C when F lt E ? R(1,US) lt
R(1,C)
3Hedging
- Eliminate foreign exchange risks resulting from
possible revaluation of exchange rate - Consider case of Bombardier selling RJs to
Skywest 10 deliveries per year - Consider exchange rate risk in first year
assume that all planes are delivered at end of
year and fully paid for at that time cost per
plane US30 M - Bombardier to receive US300 M at end of first
year - Foreign exchange rate risk How many C will
Bombardier receive at end of year? Depends on
value of spot rate at that time - At current spot rate (E0.7684), US 300 M yields
C390 M - If C appreciates during year, US300 M yields
less than C390 M - _at_ E as of September 15/03 (0.7332), US300 M
would have yielded C409 M - If C depreciates, US300M yields more than 390
M
4Hedging
- Options for Bombardier
- Speculate maximum exposure depends upon degree
of appreciation - Hedge avoid exposure
- Hedging options
- Forward contract lock in forward rate F(1) ?
Bombardier will receive with certainty at end of
year 300 M/F(1) - Bombardier foregoes possibility of gaining from
depreciation - One-year futures contract
- One-year put option to sell US300 M and receive
C ?? most costly form of hedging but allows
Bombardier to gain from depreciation of C
5Demand for Financial Assets
- Relative expected rates of return returns on
financial assets denominated in different
currencies must be compared in the same currency - Risk variability of expected return, default
risk and expected losses in case of default - Comparison of expected return for same degree of
risk - Diversification of portfolio to reduce overall
risk for portfolio - Liquidity cost/speed of converting asset into
cash - Precautionary motive for holding liquid assets
6Demand for Financial Assets
- Two financial assets Government of Canada bond
with one year to maturity US Government Bond
with one year to maturity - C bonds have higher degree of risk and are more
illiquid than US bonds ? ? represents value of
risk and illiquidity - Covered interest rate parity condition must hold
(with expected E E(e) in place of F) adjusted
for greater risk and less liquidity of C
government bonds - R(1,C) R(1,US) (E(e)-E)/E ?
- (E(e)-E)/E expected change in value of C
- (E(e)-E)/E gt 0 ? C expected to depreciate
- (Ee-E)/E lt 0 ? C expected to appreciate
7E
1
E0
R(1,US)0, ?0, E(e)0
R(1,C)
R0
8Impact on Exchange Rate
- Impact on E
- ? R(1,US)
- ? R(1,C)
- ??
- ? E(e)
9E
? R(1,US), ?, or E(e)
2
E1
1
E0
3
E2
R(1,US)0, ?0, E(e)0
R(1,C)
R1
R0