Title: Exchange Rates and
1Chapter 13
- Exchange Rates and
- the Foreign Exchange Market
2Exchange rate
- The price of a currency in terms of another
currency - Domestic Currency (DC)
- Foreign Currency (FC)
- The exchange rate can be quoted as
- DC / FC ( per unit of )
- FC / DC ( per unit of )
- We express the exchange rate as E DC / FC.
3Appreciation and Depreciation
- Appreciation increase in value
- Depreciation decrease in value
- An increase in E depreciation of DC
- (or appreciation of FC)
- A decrease in E appreciation of DC
- (or depreciation of FC)
4Example 1
- The current exchange rate of the pound is
2.000/. A year ago, it was 1.818/. - Has the pound appreciated or depreciated?
- Calculate the rate of appreciation or
depreciation of the pound.
5Example 2
- The exchange rate of the Turkish lira was 45,000
TL/ in 1995 and 107,000TL/ in 1996. - Had the lira appreciated or depreciated from 1995
to 1996? - Calculate the rate of appreciation or
depreciation of the lira. - note The exchange rate is expressed in the
inverse form.
6On the Turkish Lira
- 1966 1 USD 9 lira
- 1980 1 USD 90 lira
- 1988 1 USD 1,300 lira
- 1995 1 USD 45,000 lira
- 1996 1 USD 107,000 lira
- 2001 1 USD 1,650,000 lira
- 2004 1 USD 1,350,000 lira
- 2007 1 USD 1,260,000 (old) lira 1.26 new
lira
7- Cross rates
- 1 C1.3538 1 120.00
- Then the yen price of C1?
- ( /)/(C/)
- 120.00/1.3538 88.64
- What is the C price of a yen?
- Effective exchange rates the average of several
exchange rates
8Example
- A US dollar costs 7.5 Norwegian kroner, but the
same dollar can be purchased for 1.25 Swiss
franc. - How many Norwegian Kroners can you get with a
Swiss franc? (What is the Norwegian kroner/Swiss
franc exchange rate?) - Currency codes USD(), CHF, NOK
- NOK/CHF (NOK/USD)/(CHF/USD) __
9Trade Weighted Index of the US dollar
- Top A weighted average of the foreign exchange
value of the USD against the currencies of a
broad group of major U.S. trading partners. - Bottom against a subset of the broad index
currencies that circulate widely outside the
country of issue. (major currencies)
10FX Market Participants
- Private firms (exporters and importers)
- Commercial banks
- (Other financial institutions)
- Central banks
11Main characteristics of the market
- Major trading centers London, New York, Tokyo,
Frankfurt, Singapore. - The volume of foreign exchange has grown
- in 1989 the daily volume of trading was 600
billion, in 2007 the daily volume of trading was
over 2 trillion. - About 90 of transactions in 2001 involved US
dollars.
12Exchange rate and Relative prices
- Depreciation of DC makes
- Foreign goods more/less expensive to domestic
consumers - Domestic goods more/less expensive to foreign
consumers - Appreciation has the opposite effects
13Foreign exchange markets
- Spot market (for immediate delivery and payment)
- immediate means within 2-3 days
- Forward market (for future delivery and payment)
- Forward contract A fixed-price contract
made today for delivery of a certain amount of a
currency at a specified future date (settlement
date).
14- Swaps
- A currency swap combines both a spot and a
forward transaction into one deal. - Futures
- A FX futures contract A standardized
agreement with an organized exchange to buy or
sell a currency at a fixed price at a certain
date in the future. -
- e. Options
- A FX option is a contract for future
delivery of a specific currency, in which the
holder of the option has the right to buy (or
sell) the currency at an agreed price, the strike
or exercise price, but is not required to do so. - Call and put options
15Activities in the FX market
- Arbitrage
- Simultaneous buying and selling (of a
currency) to take profit from price differential - Hedging
- Covering from exchange risk due to open
positions in FX - Speculation
- Creating and holding an open position to
profit from the difference in ones expectation
and markets valuation
16- Examples
- Spatial arbitrage
- Q The pound is priced at 1.50 in NY and 1.45
in London. What would you do as a currency
arbitrageur? - Triangular arbitrage
- Q In FX market (in the same or different
locations), the foreign exchange rates are
quoted as follows - the / rate is 1.5, the / rate is 1.1,
and the / rate is 1.55. - Start with a pound, and see how much
profit can be made if you make a complete 3-way
trip to the pound?
17Hedging Dealing with foreign exchange risk
- An importer with a payable of 1 million in
3 months. What options are available? - (i) Do nothing. Wait 3 months and buy euros spot
when the payment is due. There is foreign
exchange risk. Describe it. - (ii) Buy euros 3-month forward now.
- If the 3-month forward rate .9188
- the importer will pay 1 mil (.9188) in 3
months. - (iii) Exchange risk can be covered with futures
or options.
18Demand for Foreign Currency Assets
- Demand for an asset depends on
- Rate of return () The percentage increase in
value an asset offers over a given time period. - Risk (-) The variability it contributes to
savers wealth - Liquidity () The ease with which it can be sold
or exchanged for goods - The sign indicates the direction of the
relationship between the variable and asset
demand.
19Rate of return
- Defining Asset Returns
- The percentage increase in value an asset offers
over a given time period. - Interest (or Dividend) valuation change
- The Real Rate of Return
- The rate of return computed by measuring asset
values in terms of some broad representative
basket of products that savers regularly
purchase. - Equals the nominal rate of return minus the rate
of inflation
20Rate of return for foreign assets
- Suppose
- Todays exchange rate 1.10/
- Next years expected exchange rate 1.165/
- The expected appreciation of the euro 5.9
- The interest rate on dollar deposits 10
- The interest rate on euro deposits 5
- Which deposit, dollar or euro, offers the higher
return?
21Rate of return for foreign assets
- Dollar deposit
- 1 today will be worth 1.10 next year
- This is a 10 return.
- Euro deposit
- 1 today will be worth 1.05 next year.
- (In dollar terms) 1.10 today will be worth
(1.05)(1.165) 1.2233 - This is a 11.2 return.
22A Simple Rule
- The dollar rate of return on euro deposits is
approximately the euro interest rate plus the
rate of depreciation of the dollar against the
euro. - The rate of depreciation of the dollar against
the euro is the percentage increase in the
dollar/euro exchange rate over a year. - In symbol, R (Ee - E)/E
- where
- R foreign interest rate
- E todays exchange rate (remember DC per FC!)
- Ee the exchange rate expected a year from today
23R (Ee - E)/E
- The above equals R Ee /E 1.
- Depreciation of the domestic currency today
lowers the expected return on deposits in foreign
currency. - A current depreciation of domestic currency will
raise the initial cost of investing in foreign
currency, thereby lowering the expected return in
foreign currency. - In the case of appreciation, change the direction
of the underlined words.
24Expected Returns on Euro Deposits when Ee
1.05/
25The Current Exchange Rate and the Expected
Return on Euro Deposits
26The Current Exchange Rate and the Expected Return
on Dollar Deposits
27Equilibrium Exchange Rate
- Equilibrium in the FX market obtains when
- R R (Ee - E)/E
- (Uncovered) Interest Parity condition
- If R gt R (Ee - E)/E ? DC assets are more
attractive and the DC appreciates. - If R lt R (Ee - E)/E ? FC assets are more
attractive and the DC depreciates.
28Determination of the Equilibrium Exchange Rate
29Changes in R, R, and Ee
- The domestic currency
- appreciates (E?) if the domestic interest rate
rises (R ?). - _____ (E__) if the foreign interest rate rises
(R ?). - _____ (E__) if the domestic currency is expected
to depreciate (Ee ?).
30The Effect of a Rise in the Dollar Interest Rate
31The Effect of a Rise in the Euro Interest Rate
32The Effect of an Expected Appreciation of the Euro
People now expect the euro to appreciate
33Problem
- (13-4) Calculate the dollar rates of return on
the following assets - A 10,000 deposit in a London bank in a year when
the interest rate on pounds is 10 and the /
exchange rate moves from 1.50/ to 1.38/.
34Problem
- (13-6) Suppose the dollar interest rate and the
pound sterling interest are the same, 5 per
year. - What is the relation between the current
equilibrium / exchange rate and its expected
future level? - Suppose the expected future / exchange rate
remains constant at 1.52/ as Britains interest
rate rises to 10. If the US interest rate also
remains constant, what is the new equilibrium /
exchange rate?
35(No Transcript)
36Fig. 13-1 Dollar/Pound Spot and Forward Exchange
Rates, 19812007
Source Datastream. Rates shown are 90-day
forward exchange rates and spot exchange rates,
at end of month.
37Summary
- The_____ is the price of foreign currency in
terms of domestic currency. - (Appreciation/Depreciation) of a countrys
currency means that it is more valuable and goods
denominated in it are more expensive exports
become more expensive and imports cheaper. - Commercial and investment banks that invest in
deposits of different currencies dominate the
foreign exchange market. ______ are most
important in determining the willingness to hold
these deposits.
38Summary (cont.)
- What is the expected rate of return on foreign
deposits? Write it down in symbol. _____. - Equilibrium in the FX market the rates of
returns on deposits in domestic currency and in
foreign currency are equal this condition is
called _____. - Depreciation of the DC (increases/decreases) the
expected return on FC deposit. - An increase in the domestic interest rate
(appreciates / depreciates) the domestic
currency.