Title: Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro 9th Edition J.Wiley
1Multinational Financial Management Alan
Shapiro9th Edition J.Wiley Sons
- Power Points by
- Joseph F. Greco, Ph.D.
- California State University, Fullerton
2CHAPTER 4
- PARITY CONDITIONS AND CURRENCY FORECASTING
3ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE
- I. THE LAW OF ONE PRICE
- A. Law states
- Identical goods sell for the same price
worldwide. -
4ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE
- B. Theoretical basis
- If the prices after exchange-rate
- adjustment were not equal, arbitrage for the
goods worldwide ensures that eventually they will.
5ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE
- C. Five Parity Conditions Result From These
Arbitrage Activities - 1. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
- 2. The Fisher Effect (FE)
- 3. The International Fisher Effect
- (IFE)
- 4. Interest Rate Parity (IRP)
- 5. Unbiased Forward Rate (UFR)
6ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE
- D. Five Parity Conditions Linked by
-
- 1. The adjustment of various
- rates and prices to inflation
-
- 2. The notion that money should have no
- effect on real variables (since they
- have been adjusted for price changes)
-
7ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE
- E. Inflation and home currency depreciation
- 1. jointly determined by the growth of
domestic money supply - 2. relative to the growth of
- domestic money demand
8ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE
- F. THE LAW OF ONE PRICE
- - enforced by international
- arbitrage.
9PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- I. THE THEORY OF PURCHASING
- POWER PARITY
- states that spot exchange rates between
currencies will change to the differential in
inflation rates between countries.
10PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- II. ABSOLUTE PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- A. Price levels adjusted for
- exchange rates should be
- equal between countries
-
11PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- II. ABSOLUTE PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- B. One unit of currency has same purchasing
power globally.
12PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- III. RELATIVE PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- A. states that the exchange rate of one
currency against another will adjust to
reflect changes in the price levels of the
two countries -
13PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- 1. In mathematical terms
-
-
- where et future spot rate
- e0 spot rate
- ih home inflation
- if foreign inflation
- t the time period
14PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- 2. If purchasing power parity is expected to
hold, then the best prediction for the one-period
spot rate should be -
15PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- 3. A more simplified but less precise
relationship is -
-
-
- that is, the percentage change should be
approximately equal to the inflation rate
differential. -
16PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- 4. PPP states
- the currency with the higher inflation rate is
expected to depreciate relative to the currency
with the lower rate of inflation
17PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- B. Real Exchange Rates
- the quoted or nominal rate adjusted for a
countrys inflation rate is -
18PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- C. Real exchange rates
- 1. If exchange rates adjust to inflation
differential, PPP states that real exchange
rates stay the same. -
19PURCHASING POWER PARITY
- C. Real exchange rates (cont)
- 2. Competitive positions
- domestic and foreign firms are unaffected
20THE FISHER EFFECT (FE)
- I. THE FISHER EFFECT (FE)
- A. Definition
- states that nominal interest rates (r) are a
function of the real interest rate (a) and a
premium (i) for inflation expectations. -
- R a i
21THE FISHER EFFECT
- B. Real Rates of Interest
- 1. Should tend toward equality
- everywhere through arbitrage.
- 2. With no government interference nominal
rates vary by inflation differential or - rh - rf ih - if
22THE FISHER EFFECT
- C. According to the Fisher Effect
- countries with higher inflation rates have
higher interest rates
23THE FISHER EFFECT
- Due to capital market integration globally,
interest rate differentials are eroding
24THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT
- I. IFE STATES
- A. the spot rate adjusts to the interest rate
differential between two countries -
25THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT
26THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT
- B. Fisher postulated
- 1. The nominal interest rate differential
should - reflect the inflation rate differential
-
27THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT
- B. Fisher also postulated
- 2. Expected rates of return are equal in
the absence of government intervention
28THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT
- C. Simplified IFE equation
- (if rf is relatively small)
-
-
29THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT
- D. Implications of IFE
-
- 1. Currency with the lower interest rate is
expected to appreciate relative to the one - with a higher rate
-
30THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT
- D. Implications of IFE (cont)
- 2. Financial market arbitrage
- insures interest rate differential is an
unbiased predictor of change in future
spot rate.
31INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY
- I. INTRODUCTION
- A. The Theory states
- the forward rate (F) differs from the spot
rate (S) at equilibrium by an amount equal to
the interest differential (rh - rf) between two
countries
32INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY
- 1. The forward premium or
- discount equals the interest
- rate differential.
- (F - S)/S (rh - rf)
- where rh the home rate
- rf the foreign rate
33INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY
- 2. In equilibrium, returns on currencies will be
the same - i. e. No profit will be realized and interest
parity exists which can be written -
34INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY
- B. Covered Interest Arbitrage
- 1. Conditions required
- interest rate differential does not equal the
forward premium or discount - 2. Funds will move to a country
- with a more attractive rate.
35INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY
- 3. Market pressures develop
- a. As one currency is more demanded spot and
sold forward - b. Inflow of fund depresses interest rates
-
- c. Parity eventually reached
-
36INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY
- C. Summary
- Interest Rate Parity states
- 1. Higher interest rates on a currency
are offset by forward discounts - 2. Lower interest rates are offset by forward
premiums
37THE FORWARD AND THE FUTURE SPOT RATE
- I. THE UNBIASED FORWARD RATE
- A. States that, if the forward rate (ft ) is
unbiased, then it should reflect the expected
future spot rate (et) -
- B. Stated as
- ft et
38CURRENCY FORECASTING
- I. FORECASTING MODELS
- A. Created to forecast exchange rates in
addition to parity conditions - B. Two types of forecast
- 1. Market-based
- 2. Model-based
39CURRENCY FORECASTING
- 1. MARKET-BASED FORECASTS
- derived from market indicators
- a. The current forward rate contains implicit
information about exchange rate changes for one
year - b. Interest rate differentials may be used to
predict exchange rates beyond one year
40CURRENCY FORECASTING
- 2. MODEL-BASED FORECASTS
- include fundamental and technical analysis
- a. Fundamental relies on key macroeconomic
variables and policies which most like affect
exchange rates. -
- b. Technical relies on use of
- 1.) Historical volume and price data
- 2.) Charting and trend analysis