Title: La Visin Internacional
1La VisiĆ³n Internacional
- Seminario sobre El Mercado Cambiario en Chile
- David Sekiguchi
- 14 de Junio del 2002
- Santiago de Chile
Emerging Markets Research
2Credibility stands at the core of the development
of the Chilean local capital market
- Chile has a major advantage over most Latin
American countries Credibility - Credibility has been earned through the
responsible management of economic policy - Chilean policy making has targeted a path of low
and stable real interest rates - The success of the disinflation effort has
yielded also low and stable nominal rates - Long term markets have developed to an extent
unparalleled in Latin America - The transition to a floating exchange rate system
has been a success despite very adverse external
conditions (lower capital flows, falling terms of
trade, regional crises)
3Chile has made important steps to develop its
local capital market
- Over the last five years there has been an
important opening of financial markets,
drastically eliminating restrictions in the
capital account - After having gradually prepared the market, the
Central Bank complemented this effort by floating
the currency in September 1999 - The current administration has introduced
important reforms in two different phases - It is broadly acknowledged that reforms of the
first phase have already improved the structure
of the market - Similar positive feedback is given about the
recently introduced second phase proposal - However, there are some remaining possible
reforms that can help make Chile's local markets
more efficient, as well as more attractive for
foreign investors
4Opportunities for further market development
- The most important opportunities for the
Government to further develop Chile's local
capital market and enhance its efficiency can be
divided in two areas - Complete the markets the range of
instruments available and transactions allowed
could be significantly expanded. This should
allow for a better allocation of risks - Reduce regulatory distortions there still exist
meaningful distortions that alter relative prices
and/or increase transaction costs. Some of these
create biases between different assets or against
the formal financial system as a whole, and
generate an inefficient allocation of risk and
resources
5Completing the markets Issues to address
- The participation of foreign investors in Chiles
local markets remains limited - Global fixed income and currency fund managers
broadly agreed that the main deterrents against
larger foreign participation in Chile's local
markets are the following - Low yields
- Low liquidity
- Inability to sell short in the market
- Very limited availability of derivative
instruments - Limited existence of nominal yield instruments
6Completing the markets Issues to address (cont.)
- Of these deterrents, there is a strong consensus
that currently the most important reason for
their lack of participation is the low yield
available in Chiles financial instruments - This is precisely the one variable that the
Government is not interested in changing to make
the market more attractive for foreign investors
- Besides the yield issue, the low foreign
participation in Chiles local capital market is
due, according to the fund managers, to the
unavailability of market instruments (the market
incompleteness shortcoming)
7Completing the markets
- The most important steps that can generate
meaningful progress toward the completion of the
market are in our view the following - Development of a risk-free nominal yield curve
- Development of a security lending market to make
short-selling feasible - This is part of the Second Phase of the Capital
Markets Reform - Development of markets for derivative instruments
beyond FX forwards
8Development of a nominal yield curve
- Chile has to a large extent successfully
completed a steady disinflation process - Over this period, the development of the capital
market rested on the creation of
inflation-protected instruments - The indexation of the economy protected
bondholders and left the government more exposed.
This effort arguably slowed the disinflation
process - Nearing the end of the process, the Central Bank
and the Government have accumulated credibility,
an asset central to the further development of
the capital market - With the successful disinflation, the Central
Bank was able to nominalize its monetary policy
tool, the policy interest rate, on (August 2001)
- However, nominal yield instruments remain a very
small portion of the outstanding government debt
stock
9A nominal yield curve is crucial for the further
development of the local capital market
- The existence of nominal yield instruments will
facilitate the participation of foreign investors
and offer more choices to domestic investors also - The vast majority of foreign investors are
uncomfortable with inflation indexed paper - A nominal yield curve would allow foreign
investors to take positions that reflect their
views on future inflation - The development a a nominal CLP yield curve is a
necessary building block to increase the
availability of FX derivatives - The creation of nominal yield instruments will
also allow the Government to further reduce risk
mismatches - Nominal debt is in fact state-contingent debt in
real terms, with the Government able to influence
the real value of its liabilities - Obviously the Government has to be prudent with
this tool, but this flexibility can help the
Government better absorb price shocks
10A market of securities lending
- The ability to short-sell will be critical to the
development of the local capital market - The possibility of short selling risk-free
securities should greatly facilitate the growth
of the credit market - It should also help the progress of interest rate
derivative instruments - It would also allow for a more efficient
allocation of risk for the entire economy (a
welfare argument) - With the recent reform that authorizes securities
lending (starting August 1 2002), the Government
has already taken what could prove to be the
decisive step for the development of a short
selling market - An important issue is the expectations that
institutional investors have about the
Reglamento that should set the rules for
securities lending - Some investors expressed concerns that it might
be so restrictive that it could actually
discourage the emergence of a meaningful market
11Expand the derivatives market
- The combination of a nominal yield curve and the
possibility of short selling provides the
building blocks needed for the existence of an
interest rate swap market, as well as a
significant extension of the cross currency swap
market - These swap markets would allow for better
management of economic risks, for the benefic of
the Government and the private sector - This should also be very beneficial for the
growth of non-Government issues in CLP - Private sector parties would be able to issue
plain vanilla fixed rate nominal paper to
maximize market receptiveness, while hedging
risks to generate a potentially different
liability structure that better matches their
desired liability profile
12Enhance liquidity
- Liquidity stands at the core of investor worries.
The Government can foster liquidity in the
markets by undertaking the following actions - Facilitating the creation of new types of
financial instruments - Facilitating the creation of new (nominal)
benchmark instruments - Introducing a system of market-makers
13Facilitating the creation of new instruments
- A trade starts with a difference in views between
two market participants - However, even with different views and the
willingness to trade at a price that would be
acceptable by both buyer and seller, there are
just no instruments or markets available - Therefore, the existence of more instruments
should lead to a higher trading volume and to
enhanced market liquidity
14Facilitate the creation of new (nominal)
benchmarks
- The emergence of nominal benchmarks would
facilitate a gradual shift to a nominal fixed
income market - The benchmarks should be structured so that
trading is facilitated and encouraged - Auctions should be held regularly and predictably
- The instruments should be simple and homogeneous
- They should be similar to those used by investors
globally, typically zero coupon instruments at
the short end of the curve, and coupon bullets
for longer tenors - The government should conduct exchanges to retire
issues of small sizes by issuing or expanding
benchmarks
15Introduction of a system of market makers
- Market makers typically act as financial agents
to the Government in all domestic debt
transactions and placements - Market makers usually meet with the authorities
before the auctions to analyze and provide
feedback on the market situation - Market makers face a number of obligations,
providing a minimum demand in the primary market,
and liquidity in the secondary market - Below are some of the rules by which market
makers have to abide - Participate in every auction
- Constantly supply bid and offer quotes at a
reasonable spread - Need to reach a minimum participation level as a
share of total trading volumes - The list of market makers should be periodically
revised
16Conclusions Chile has taken very important
steps, but there is still significant room for
improvement
- Credible and prudent macro policies are a
necessary component, and these have strengthened
again after a deterioration under the previous
administration - However, further progress is still needed to
continue strengthening what has become a very
open economy in a context of volatile capital
flows and terms of trade - Both the government and the private sector can
smooth the volatility they face with deeper
markets for exchange rates, interest rates, and
equities - The government can facilitate advances to
complete the markets, as well as to eliminate
regulatory distortions