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International Finance

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Title: Economics Principles and Applications Author: John F Hall Last modified by: Vervono Created Date: 10/28/2003 8:43:46 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: International Finance


1
International Finance
  • Chapter 21
  • Financial Globalization
  • Opportunity and Crisis

2
Preview
  • Gains from trade
  • Portfolio diversification
  • Players in the international capital markets
  • Attainable policies with international capital
    markets
  • Offshore banking and offshore currency trading
  • Regulation of international banking
  • Tests of how well international capital markets
    allow portfolio diversification, allow
    intertemporal trade, and transmit information

3
International Capital Markets
  • International asset (capital) markets are a group
    of markets (in London, Tokyo, New York,
    Singapore, and other financial cities) that trade
    different types of financial and physical assets
    (capital), including
  • stocks
  • bonds (government and private sector)
  • deposits denominated in different currencies
  • commodities (like petroleum, wheat, bauxite,
    gold)
  • forward contracts, futures contracts, swaps,
    options contracts
  • real estate and land
  • factories and equipment

4
Figure 1 The Three Types of International
Transaction Trade
5
Gains from International Trade
  • The theory of comparative advantage describes the
    gains from trade of goods and services for other
    goods and services.
  • The theory of intertemporal trade describes the
    gains from trade of goods and services for
    assets, of goods and services today for claims to
    goods and services in the future (todays
    assets).
  • The theory of portfolio diversification describes
    the gains from trade in assets of different risk
    profiles.

6
Classification of Assets
  • Assets can be classified as either
  • Debt instruments
  • Examples include bonds and deposits.
  • They specify that the issuer must repay a fixed
    amount regardless of economic conditions.
  • or
  • Equity instruments
  • Examples include stocks or a title to real
    estate.
  • They specify ownership (equity ownership) of
    variable profits or returns, which vary according
    to economic conditions.

7
International Capital Markets
  • The participants
  • Commercial banks and other depository
    institutions
  • Nonbank financial institutions such as securities
    firms, pension funds, insurance companies, mutual
    funds
  • Private firms
  • Central banks and government agencies

8
Offshore Banking
  • Offshore banking refers to banking outside of the
    boundaries of a country.
  • There are at least 3 types of offshore banking
    institutions, which are regulated differently
  • An agency office in a foreign country makes loans
    and transfers, but does not accept deposits, and
    is therefore not subject to depository
    regulations in either the domestic or foreign
    country.

9
Offshore Banking (cont.)
  1. A subsidiary bank in a foreign country follows
    the regulations of the foreign country, not the
    domestic regulations of the domestic parent.
  2. A foreign branch of a domestic bank is often
    subject to both domestic and foreign regulations,
    but sometimes may choose the more lenient
    regulations of the two.

10
International Money Market
  • Eurocurrency is a time deposit in an
    international bank located in a country different
    than the country that issues the currency.
  • For example, Eurodollars are U.S.
    dollar-denominated time deposits in banks located
    abroad.
  • Euroyen are yen-denominated time deposits in
    banks located outside of Japan.
  • The foreign bank doesnt have to be located in
    Europe.
  • Reserve requirements

11
Eurocurrency Market
  • Most Eurocurrency transactions are interbank
    transactions in the amount of 1,000,000 and up.
  • Common reference rates include
  • LIBOR the London Interbank Offered Rate
  • PIBOR the Paris Interbank Offered Rate
  • SIBOR the Singapore Interbank Offered Rate
  • A new reference rate for the new euro currency
  • EURIBOR the rate at which interbank time deposits
    of are offered by one prime bank to another.

12
Eurocredits
  • Eurocredits are short- to medium-term loans of
    Eurocurrency.
  • The loans are denominated in currencies other
    than the home currency of the Eurobank.
  • Often the loans are too large for one bank to
    underwrite a number of banks form a syndicate to
    share the risk of the loan.
  • Eurocredits feature an adjustable rate. On
    Eurocredits originating in London the base rate
    is LIBOR.

13
Regulation of International Banking
  • Banks fail because they do not have enough or the
    right kind of assets to pay for their
    liabilities.
  • The principal liability for commercial banks and
    other depository institutions is the value of
    deposits, and banks fail when they cannot pay
    their depositors.
  • If the value of assets decline, say because many
    loans go into default, then liabilities could
    become greater than the value of assets and
    bankruptcy could result.
  • In many countries there are several types of
    regulations to avoid bank failure or its effects.

14
Regulation of International Banking (cont.)
  • Deposit insurance
  • Moral Hazard
  • Reserve requirements
  • Capital requirements and asset restrictions
  • Bank examination
  • Lender of last resort
  • Government-organized bailouts

15
International Regulatory Cooperation
  • Basel accords (in 1988 and 2006) provide standard
    regulations and accounting for international
    financial institutions.
  • 1988 accords tried to make bank capital
    measurements standard across countries.
  • They developed risk-based capital requirements,
    where more risky assets require a higher amount
    of bank capital.
  • Core principles of effective banking supervision
    was developed by the Basel Committee in 1997 for
    countries without adequate banking regulations
    and accounting standards.

16
International Portfolio Investment
  • International Correlation Structure and Risk
    Diversification
  • Optimal International Portfolio Selection
  • Effects of Changes in the Exchange Rate
  • International Diversification through Country
    Funds, ADRs, ETFs, and Hedge Funds
  • Why Home Bias in Portfolio Holdings?

17
International Correlation Structure and Risk
Diversification
  • Security returns are much less correlated across
    countries than within a country.
  • This is so because economic, political,
    institutional, and even psychological factors
    affecting security returns tend to vary across
    countries, resulting in low correlations among
    international securities.
  • Business cycles are often high asynchronous
    across countries.

18
Figure 3 Domestic vs. International
Diversification
19
Summary Statistics for Monthly Returns 1980-2007
(U.S.)
Country stock market vs. world
20
Figure 4 Optimal International Portfolio
21
Composition of the OIP for a U.S.
Investor(Holding Period 19802007)
Australia Hong Kong 4.82 8.76
Italy 6.60
Netherlands 31.11
Sweden 28.01
U.S. 20.70
Total 100.00
22
Gains from International Diversification
ODP
23
Effects of Changes in the Exchange Rate
  • The realized dollar return for a U.S. resident
    investing in a foreign market will depend not
    only on the return in the foreign market but also
    on the change in the exchange rate between the
    U.S. dollar and the foreign currency.

24
Effects of Changes in the Exchange Rate
  • The realized dollar return for a U.S. resident
    investing in a foreign market is given by
  • Ri (1 Ri)(1 ei) 1
  • Ri ei Riei

Where Ri is the local currency return in the ith
market ei is the rate of change in the exchange
rate between the local currency and the dollar
25
Effects of Changes in the Exchange Rate
  • The risk for a U.S. resident investing in a
    foreign market will depend not only on the risk
    in the foreign market but also on the risk in the
    exchange rate between the U.S. dollar and the
    foreign currency.
  • Var(Ri) Var(Ri) Var(ei) 2Cov(Ri,ei) ?Var

The ?Var term represents the contribution of the
cross-product term, Riei, to the risk of foreign
investment.
26
International Diversification through Country
Funds
  • Recently, country funds have emerged as one of
    the most popular means of international
    investment.
  • A country fund invests exclusively in the stocks
    of a single county. This allows investors to
  • Speculate in a single foreign market with minimum
    cost.
  • Construct their own personal international
    portfolios.
  • Diversify into emerging markets that are
    otherwise practically inaccessible.

27
International Diversification through American
Depository Receipts
  • There are many advantages to trading ADRs as
    opposed to direct investment in the companys
    shares
  • ADRs are denominated in U.S. dollars, trade on
    U.S. exchanges and can be bought through any
    broker.
  • Dividends are paid in U.S. dollars.
  • Most underlying stocks are bearer securities, the
    ADRs are registered.
  • Adding ADRs to domestic portfolios has a
    substantial risk reduction benefit.

28
International Diversification with Exchange
Traded Funds
  • Using exchange traded funds (ETFs) like WEBS and
    spiders, investors can trade a whole stock market
    index as if it were a single stock.
  • Being open-end funds, WEBS trade at prices that
    are very close to their net asset values. In
    addition to single country index funds, investors
    can achieve global diversification
    instantaneously just by holding shares of the SP
    Global 100 Index Fund that is also trading on the
    AMEX with other WEBS.

29
Home Bias in Portfolio Holdings
  • As previously documented, investors can
    potentially benefit a great deal from
    international diversification.
  • The actual portfolios that investors hold,
    however, are quite different from those predicted
    by the theory of international portfolio
    investment.
  • Home bias refers to the extent to which portfolio
    investments are concentrated in domestic equities.

30
Home Bias in Equity Portfolios
31
Why Home Bias in Portfolio Holdings?
  • Three explanations come to mind
  • Domestic equities may provide a superior
    inflation hedge.
  • Home bias may reflect institutional and legal
    restrictions on foreign investment.
  • Extra taxes and transactions/information costs
    for foreign securities may give rise to home bias.

32
National Saving and Investment
  • In an open economy (with international borrowing
    and lending), should national saving and
    investment be highly correlated?
  • If some countries borrow for investment projects
    (for future production and consumption) while
    others lend to these countries, then national
    saving and investment levels should not be highly
    correlated.
  • In reality, national saving and investment levels
    are highly correlated.

33
Figure 5 Saving and Investment Rates for 24
Countries, 19902007 Averages
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