Title: ECONOMICS 3150B Lecture 7 October 6, 2005
1ECONOMICS 3150BLecture 7October 6, 2005
2Test on Tuesday, October 11 _at_ 1255-220PMNo
class on Thursday, October 13
3Responsible for Test 1Part 1 Currency
Markets, Exchange rates, Currency markets, Fixed
vs. flexible exchange rates, Common currency
areaReadings chs. 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19,
20, 21
4Bank of Canada Balance Sheet
- Assets
- Domestic assets Government of Canada bonds
- Foreign assets Foreign currencies, gold, foreign
Government Treasury Bills (T-bills)
- Liabilities
- Deposits held by private banks
- Currency in circulation
5Fixed Exchange Rates Policy Effectiveness
- B. of C. committed to maintaining value of
exchange rate - Consider case ??
- Traditional D/S model
- ? in D for C, ? in S of C
- In absence of intervention, C depreciates in
value (E?) - To keep exchange rate constant, B. of C. either ?
M ? ?R or intervene directly and buy C (sell
foreign assets) - Consider direct intervention requirement for
foreign asset reserves - Problem can B. of C. persist in buying C?
6Direct Intervention Sell foreign assets
E
S of C imports
E0
D for C exports
Q(C)
S
D
7Flexible Exchange Rates
- Independent monetary policy not constrained by
need to keep exchange rate fixed at particular
level - Fiscal policy ineffective
- Expansionary policy ?? R ? ? E ?? EX gS and ? IM
gS ? ? aggregate demand - Combination of higher interest rates and
appreciation of C neutralize expansionary
effects of fiscal policy - Ignoring effects on P and repercussions on
aggregate D for gs - Degree of independence
- US ? M to stimulate economy and reduce UR
(Canadian policy-makers likely to have same
objective) - US actions will lead to appreciation of C (? in
US GDP ? ? Canadian CU and ? R(US) ? ?Canadian
CA) which will reduce positive spillover effect
from US - flexible rates will require B. of C. to follow
lead of US Federal Reserve
8Flexible Exchange Rates
- Automatic stabilizer
- Increase in rate of inflation in US
- R(C) R(US) E(e)-E/E ?
- E(e)-E/E ?E(e) ?P(C) - ?P(US)
- Assume ?P(C) ?P(US) ?P(D) ? initially
? ?E(e) 0 - Now assume ?P(US) ? ? ?E(e) lt 0 ? E ?
(appreciation) - P(C) P(D)?P(US)E1-? ??P(C) ??P(D) (1-
?)?P(US) ?E(e) - ?P(C) ?
- If ?P(US) ? ? ?E ? ? offsetting impact on
?P(C) - With fixed exchange rates
- If ?P(US) ? ? ?P(C) ?
9Dollarization
- Problems with flexible exchange rates
- Effectiveness of independent monetary policy
- Trade costs hedging
- Competitiveness incentives
- Instability of foreign exchange markets
tendency to overshoot
- Problems with Dollarization
- Loss of independent m.p.
- Loss of automatic stabilizer
- Economic performance and sovereignty
10International Capital Markets
- Group of closely interconnected markets in which
assets trade - Foreign exchange markets part of international
capital markets - Debt, equity, futures, options, commodities,
currencies, etc.
11Diversification
- Risk reduction
- Same expected return, lower risk for portfolio
- Higher expected return, same degree of risk
- Risk aversion
- Risks
- Default
- Price variability
- Exchange rate
- Imperfect information
- Insurance markets financial and non-financial
risks - Spread risks re-insurance, insurance pools
- Pooling of risks insurance pools
- Derivatives
12Sovereign Debt and Defaults
- Private debt CCAA, ch. 11
- Convert debt into equity
- Convert into new debt with lower face value and
lower interest rates - Receive cash for fraction of value at maturity
(pennies on the dollar)
- Sovereign debt
- Conversion into equity not an option
- Convert into new debt with lower face value and
lower interest rates - Defer interest and principal payments, possible
reduction in interest rate - Receive cash
- IMF provides new loans to make payments on
outstanding debt loans generally made with
conditions (re. macroeconomic policies reduce
debt, low inflation rate targets microeconomic
policies privatization, deregulation) ?
beneficiaries are current creditors
13Offshore Banking and Eurocurrencies
- Offshore banking
- Business conducted by the foreign branches,
subsidiaries of a bank outside the home country
of the bank - Eurocurrencies
- Bank deposits denominated in a currency other
than the domestic currency of the country in
which the bank or its foreign operations reside - Offshore currencies
- Typical Eurocurrency deposit is non-negotiable
time deposit with fixed term to maturity ranging
from overnight to 5 years - US deposits in a bank in Canada (Canadian, US,
other) part of Eurodollars Eurodollars US
deposits in banks outside US - C deposits in a bank outside of Canada
(Canadian, other) - Eurobanks banks that trade in market for
Eurocurrencies take deposits, make loans - Most Eurocurrency trading occurs in non-European
centers
14Rapid Growth of International Banking
- Reduction in trade costs ? growth in
international trade - Hedging currency risks
- Liberalization of capital markets
- Growth of MNEs -- banks have followed corporate
customers abroad - Circumvent restrictive domestic government
regulations on financial activity reserve
requirements, interest rate ceilings, deposit
insurance - Political factors desire by some depositors to
hold currencies outside jurisdiction of countries
that issue them freezing accounts
15Creation of Eurocurrencies
- Bombardier sells US 30 M RJ to Comair, Delta
Airline subsidiary Delta pays initial deposit
of US 3 M by check drawn on US bank (Chase) - Options for Bombardier
- Convert to C at current spot rate (E)
- Keep US (required for purchases of engines,
avionics, consulting services, etc.) - Buy US TBs
- Buy CD from US bank
- Buy Euro-US dollar deposit from Royal Bank branch
in Montreal - Only this option leads to creation of Eurodollar
deposit no change in US money supply
16Creation of Euro-US Dollars
- Bombardier
- Asset US Deposit with RB (Montreal)
- Liability US customer advances
- Comair
- Asset US customer advance
- Liability US loan from Chase
- Chase (Atlanta)
- Asset US Loan to Comair
- Asset -US deposits with Fed
- Royal Bank (Montreal)
- Asset US Deposit with DB (Frankfurt)
- Liability US Deposit of Bombardier
- Deutsche Bank (Frankfurt)
- Asset US Deposit with Citi (NY)
- Liability US Deposit of RB
- Citi (NY)
- Asset US deposits with Fed
- Liability US Deposit of DB
17Vulnerabilities
- Inter-bank lending (as in preceding example)
hierarchy of banks - Offshore bank in turn lends to another bank
interest rate on Eurodollar deposits increase as
the money moves up the hierarchy of banks -
- At top of the hierarchy, much greater default
risk than at bottom - If bank or ultimate borrower at top defaults,
default could create domino effect Royals
exposure may be much different because of
interbank lending
18Counter-Party Risks
- Derivatives
- Call option right to buy a fixed amount of a
financial assets at a pre-determined price at a
pre-determined future date - Exercise option What is counter-party (seller of
option) has disappeared? - Interest rate/currency swaps
19Swaps and Comparative Advantage
- Two companies
- A (US multinational) can borrow medium-term
(5-year bonds) at 100 basis points above US
Government bonds (4.19) and 150 basis points
above Government of Canada bonds (3.65) - B (Canadian multinational) can borrow medium-term
at 200 basis points above US Government bonds and
100 basis points above Government of Canada bonds - B has comparative advantage in Canada, A in US
- A US to Canada 23 Canada to US 32
- B US to Canada 21 Canada to US 12
- A needs to hedge against Canadian revenues B
needs to hedge against US revenues - in absence of swap agreement, A issues debt in
Canada at 5.15, B issues debt in US at 6.19
20Swaps and Comparative Advantage (Contd)
- Swap agreement for five years
- A issues debt in US at 5.19, B Issues debt in
Canada initially at 4.65 (identical principal
amounts involved) - A and B swap interest payments
- Net interest rate for A 5.19 - 5.19 4.65
4.65 in Canadian - Net interest rate for B 4.65 4.65 - 5.19
5.19 in US - Counter-party risk A or B defaults
- Swap market financial institutions operate as
intermediaries between floating-rate and fixed
rate payers, and between payers in different
currencies