Foreign Exchange Markets The Foreign-Exchange Market and Exchange Rates.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
11 THE MACROECONOMICS OF OPEN ECONOMIES. Copyright © 2004 South-Western 31 Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts.
Advertisements

MBA (Finance specialisation) & MBA – Banking and Finance (Trimester) Term VI Module : – International Financial Management Unit II: Foreign Exchange Markets.
Session 8 Exchange Rates Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the presenters and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Reserve Bank of.
Open Economy Macroeconomics The Final Frontier. Closed Economy Macroeconomics Y = C + I + G (Goods Market) S = I + (G-T) (Asset Market) There is only.
VI THE MACROECONOMICS OF OPEN ECONOMIES. 13 Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts.
Exchange Rate, Balance of Payments and International Financial Market: a review Roberta De Santis
Chapter Outline Foreign Exchange Markets and Exchange Rates
Foreign Exchange Market Exchange Rate Appreciation/Depreciation Effective Exchange Rate Trade Weighted Dollar Real Exchange Rate Interbank Market: Dealers.
Chapter 19. The Foreign Exchange Market Exchange rates Long run factors Short run factors Exchange rates Long run factors Short run factors.
13-1 Ec 335 International Trade and Finance Exchange rates and the foreign exchange market: An asset approach Giovanni Facchini.
Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts Chapter 29 Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. Requests for permission to make copies of.
Chapter 16 Price Levels and the Exchange Rate in the Long Run.
Chapter 17 The Foreign Exchange Market. Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Foreign Exchange I Exchange rate—price of one.
1 Determinants of the Exchange Rate 2 Determinants of the Exchange Rate Under a flexible rate system, the exchange rate is determined by supply and demand.
Purchasing Power Parity Interest Rate Parity
Exchange Rates and the Foreign Exchange Market
Chapter 8 The Foreign- Exchange Market and Exchange Rates.
Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts
Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 13 Exchange Rates and the Foreign Exchange Market:
Ch. 29: Open Economy: Foreign Exchange. The Prices for International Transactions: Real and Nominal Exchange Rates Nominal Exchange Rates: Rate you can.
Exchange Rates  Any transaction that appears in the balance-of- payments accounts involves trading Canadian dollars for another currency  Transactions.
Foreign Exchange FNCE 4070 – Financial Markets and Institutions.
MBA (Finance specialisation) & MBA – Banking and Finance (Trimester) Term VI Module : – International Financial Management Unit II: Foreign Exchange Markets.
Chapter 13 Supplementary Notes. Exchange rate The price of a currency in terms of another currency DC = $, FC = € The exchange rate can be quoted as –DC.
Chapter 6 Foreign Exchange. Exchange Rates – Rates at which two currencies trade. One currency in terms of another.. –Defining exchange rates The exchange.
The Foreign Exchange Market
Chapter 20 The Foreign Exchange Market. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.20-2 Foreign Exchange Market Exchange rate: price of one currency.
MECHANICS OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE (FOREX). FOREIGN EXCHANGE (FOREX) The buying and selling of currency Ex. In order to purchase souvenirs in France, it is.
Chapter 13 Exchange Rates and The Foreign Exchange Market: An Asset Approach 湖南大学经济与贸易学院 刘 志 忠.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Chapter 15 Price Levels and the Exchange Rate in the Long Run.
12-1 Issue 15 – The Foreign Exchange Market Extracted from Krugman and Obstfeld – International Economics ECON3315 International Economic Issues Instructor:
International Finance
Unit 3: Exchange Rates Foreign Exchange 3/21/2012.
Ch. 22 International Business Finance  2002, Prentice Hall, Inc.
Mankiw: Brief Principles of Macroeconomics, Second Edition (Harcourt, 2001) Ch. 12: Open Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts.
Relative Purchasing Power Parity
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 17 The Foreign Exchange Market.
10/1/2015Multinational Corporate Finance Prof. R.A. Michelfelder 1 Outline 5: Purchasing Power Parity, Interest Rate Parity, and Exchange Rate Forecasting.
PARITY CONDITIONS IN INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts Open and Closed Economies –A closed economy is one that does not interact with.
© 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley CHAPTER 1. © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
1 The Foreign Exchange Market Chapter Foreign Exchange Definitions Exchange rate: price of one currency in terms of another Exchange rate: price.
Exchange Rates. An exchange rate is the price of one currency in terms of another. –It indicates how many units of one currency can be bought with a single.
Unit 3: Monetary Policy Foreign Exchange 11/4/2010.
Chapter 14 Supplementary Notes. What is Money? Medium of Exchange –A generally accepted means of payment A Unit of Account –A widely recognized measure.
Chapter 15 Supplementary Notes.
1 The foreign Exchange market and exchange rates Lecture 18.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts Open and Closed Economies –A closed economy is one that does not interact with.
1 International Finance Chapter 16 Price Levels and the Exchange Rate in the Long Run.
19-1 Foreign Exchange Rates The Foreign Exchange Market Definitions: 1.Spot exchange rate 2.Forward exchange rate 3.Appreciation 4.Depreciation.
Exchange Rates. An exchange rate is the price of one currency in terms of another. –It indicates how many units of one currency can be bought with a single.
Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts Week 8 1Pengantar Ekonomi 2.
Price Levels and the Exchange Rate in the Long Run.
Chapter 17 The Foreign Exchange Market. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.14-2 Foreign Exchange I Exchange rate: price of one currency.
Chapter 13 Exchange Rates and the Foreign Exchange Market: An Asset Approach.
19 The World of International Finance. HOW EXCHANGE RATES ARE DETERMINED What Are Exchange Rates? exchange rate The price at which currencies trade for.
F9 Financial Management. 2 Designed to give you the knowledge and application of: Section H: Risk Management H1. The nature and type of risk and approaches.
1/38 FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKET TOPIC 13. Chapter Preview We develop a modern view of exchange rate determination that explains the behavior of exchange.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 17 The Foreign Exchange Market.
Unit 3: Monetary Policy Foreign Exchange 4/12/2011.
Chapter 18 The Foreign Exchange Market
The Foreign Exchange Market
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
Open-Economy Macroeconomics
Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts
The Foreign Exchange Market
The Foreign Exchange Market (외환시장)
THE MACROECONOMICS OF OPEN ECONOMIES
The Foreign Exchange Market
THE MACROECONOMICS OF OPEN ECONOMIES
Presentation transcript:

Foreign Exchange Markets The Foreign-Exchange Market and Exchange Rates

Why do we care about exchange rate markets? Countries have different currencies and exchange is denoted in these different currencies For trade to occur, you need to be able to buy and sell in the currency of your trading partner. Why not just one currency?

Appreciation and Depreciation Appreciation: when your currency becomes more expensive in terms of other currencies. (For example If 1 USD cost 1 Euro and then went up to 1.2 Euros you have an appreciation Depreciation: when your currency becomes less expensive in terms of other currencies. (For example if the USD cost 1 Euro and then went down to.8 Euros you have a depreciation)

Exchange Rates The nominal exchange rate is the price of one country’s exchange rate in terms of another’s. Example: In India, if you want to buy a dollar, it costs 50 Rupees on the market- so, the nominal exchange for dollars is 1/50=.02 dollars per rupee in India. In the U.S, the nominal exchange rate for a rupee is 50 rupees to the dollar.

Real Exchange Rate The real exchange rate is the purchasing power of a currency relative to the purchasing power of other currencies. Things cost different amounts in each country. For example, to take the Indian case with 50 rupees to the dollar. A shirt in India may cost 250 rupees, while in the U.S it costs 10 dollars. Are you better off buying in India or in the U.S? To check, we have to calculate the real exchange rate

Real E.R Formula: EX r =[EX X P]/P f Real E.R= (Nominal ER X Domestic Price)/Foreign Price = (Rs.50/$1 )*($10)/Rs.250=2 Indian Shirts/1 U.S Shirt So shirts are in real terms, twice as expensive in the U.S as they are in India

Price indices In reality, we compare not prices of any particular good, but general prices (price indices) (basket of goods containing lots of common items) So we compare general price levels

Relationship between Nominal and Real Exchange Rates over time Formula: EX r =[EX * P]/P f So, in percentages  EX r /EX r =  EX/EX+  P/P-  P f /P f %change in RE=% change in nominal+ percentage change in price level domestically- percentage change in price level in the foreign country

Example  EX r /EX r =  EX/EX+  P/P-  P f /P f Let us take our previous example and say that that shirts cost more in the US- (now they are $15). The RER is now (Rs.50/$1 )*($15)/Rs.250=3 Indian Shirts/1 U.S Shirt The change in EX=0, in P=50% in Pf=0 Change in EXr=50%

Foreign-Exchange Markets Spot market transactions involve immediate exchanges of currency or bank deposits. Example: I exchange one dollar for 45 rupees today Forward transactions involve future exchanges of currencies or bank deposits. Example: I buy a contract today to exchange $1 for 45 rupees 3 months from now? Why? Zero sum game.

Causes of Higher Long-run Exchange Rates A decrease in a country’s relative price level (If U.S goods are cheaper than in India, more people will buy U.S goods, and bid up the price of the dollar) An increase in a country’s relative productivity (If U.S goods are made more productively, they will be cheaper than in India, more people will buy U.S goods, and bid up the price of the dollar) A decrease in a country’s demand for foreign goods or a rise in foreign demand for a country’s exports (If people think that Indian goods are not of the same quality, they will buy more U.S goods…etc) An increase in a country’s tariffs (foreign goods become costlier)

Rearranging our Equation  EX/EX =  EX r /EX r +  f -   refers to inflation Nominal E.R change = Real E.R change+ difference in foreign and domestic inflation rates

Purchasing Power Parity/Law of One Price Law of One Price: LOOP-if two countries produce an identical good, if the good is tradable, if there is free trade and there are no transactions /transportation costs, then the price should be the same in both countries. In the shirt example, U.S consumers would buy Indian shirts, buy more rupees, causing an appreciation of the Indian rupee and making it relatively more costly to buy the shirt. This would go on till the RER= 1 shirt India/1 shirt US Purchasing power parity (PPP) theory applies the law of one price to a group of goods. Under LOOP, RER is always constant, (percentage change is zero) so according to PPP, changes in N.E.R reflect inflation rate differences cause changes in the nominal exchange rate.  EX/EX =  EX r /EX r +  f -  under  PPP  EX/EX =  f - 

Another Determinant of Exchange Rates The flow of goods and services (called trade) is not the only thing that moves between countries Capital flows too (financial flows between countries). Just like with trade, borrowers need finance in their local currency and sellers need repayment in their own currency, so they need foreign exchange markets. How does this explain the fact that while the U.S has a constant and huge trade deficit, its currency isn’t depreciating fast?

Determining Short-run Exchange Rates Investors compare the return on a domestic asset with the return on a foreign asset evaluated in terms of domestic currency.

Example in the Book Two assets with equal risk- Japanese Bonds and U.S Bonds each offering 5% return. Basic point- overall return (R) depends on both interest rate and exchange rate The return on a domestic asset (1 + i) should be compared with the return on a foreign asset evaluated in terms of domestic currency (1+ i f – ∆EX e /EX). Note Ex e = expected change If Japanese yen depreciates by 5% over the year the return to the U.S bond is 1+.05=1.05=5% return, while to the Japanese bond= =1= 0% return

The graph shows the expected rate of return on a Japanese bond. Let the expected exchange rate one year from now be 100. If current ER is 105, then actual R=.05+5/105=.098=9.8% If current ER is 97, then actual R=.05+ (-3/97)=1.9%

Rules Nominal interest rate parity: ceteris paribus, the nominal returns of domestic and foreign assets must be equal. International capital mobility results in an exchange rate market equilibrium reflecting the nominal interest rate parity condition: When domestic and foreign assets have identical risk, liquidity, and information characteristics, their nominal returns (measured in the same currency) also must be identical (i = i f – ∆EX e /EX). Real interest rate parity: expected real rates of interest are equal. (1 + r) = (1 + rf)(EXr r /EXre ).

Other comparative statics: 1. Effect of a Change in the Domestic Real Interest Rate

Effect of an Increase in Domestic Expected Inflation

Effect of a Change in the Foreign Interest Rate

Effect of Changes in Exchange Rate Expectations

Play ball! You are a currency speculator. Choose (as soon as you can) what currency, Yen or the Dollar, you would under the following bits of news…

Choices “Japanese productivity continues to increase” “U.S announces unilateral tariffs on all Japanese products” “U.S products seen to be of better quality” “Japanese raise interest rates” “Higher expected inflation in the U.S” “Moody’s downgrades Japanese bonds” “U.S trade deficit continues to rise”