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 Exchange Rate: S - # of domestic currency units purchased for 1 US$.  An increase in S is a depreciation of domestic currency and a decrease in S is.

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Presentation on theme: " Exchange Rate: S - # of domestic currency units purchased for 1 US$.  An increase in S is a depreciation of domestic currency and a decrease in S is."— Presentation transcript:

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2  Exchange Rate: S - # of domestic currency units purchased for 1 US$.  An increase in S is a depreciation of domestic currency and a decrease in S is an appreciation. Exchange Rates

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5 It is January 1 st, and you have D$1000 to save for 1 year. You can put it into: 1. Put it into a domestic currency bank account at an interest rate i. 2. a foreign currency bank account at interest rate i F.

6  Strategy two has three parts. 1. Buy foreign exchange at spot rate S 01/01 to get {D$1000/S 01/01 } US dollars. 2. Put {S 01/01 × D$1000} into bank account. After 1 year get US$(1+i F )×{D$1000/S 01/01 } 3. Convert these funds into US at exchange rate prevailing in 1 year.

7  If > 1+i, deposit funds then deposit in US$ account.  If < 1+i, deposit funds then deposit in HK$ account.  Then in equilibrium

8  The only reason people would be willing to hold a US$ account when US interest rates were lower than domestic interest rate would be if they can achieve an expected gain from an increase in the value of US$ during the time that they were holding the account.  Approximately

9 1. Future exchange rates are risky, uncovered interest parity does not account for risk. 2. Domestic and foreign currency not perfect substitutes. People like to hold currency for liquidity reasons.

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11  Relative values of two currency determined by supply and demand by traders of the two currencies.  People trade currencies to engage in foreign trade and international investment.

12 Consider the spot foreign exchange market.  Price of US$: S is the price of US$ in terms of DCU.  Supply of US$: Foreign people who want to acquire DCU to buy domestic goods or assets. ◦ When US$ becomes expensive, domestic goods or assets get cheap and foreign investors are attracted to domestic currency.  Demand for US$: Domestic people who want to acquire US$ for foreign purchases or overseas investment. ◦ When US$ get cheap, US$ goods or assets get cheap and demand for US$ rises

13 S Demand Supply S* 1

14 S Supply Demand S* Demand ' S** Domestic Currency Depreciates 1 2

15 S Supply Demand S* Supply ' S** Domestic Currency Appreciates 1 2

16 S Supply Demand S* Supply ' Demand' S** Domestic Currency Depreciates 1 2

17 S Supply Demand S* Supply ' Demand ' S** Domestic Currency Appreciates 1 2

18  The central impact of the foreign currency intervention is on domestic interest rates.  Monetary policy that shifts domestic interest rates will also shift exchange rates regardless of whether it occurs through currency intervention, OMO, or some other change in quantity of bank reserves.  Monetary policy that does not shift interest rates will not shift exchange rates.

19  If people’s expectation of the future exchange rate indicates a future depreciation, this will reduce the expected returns on investing in the domestic economy at any given interest rate.  This will increase demand for US$ and reduce supply.  An expected depreciation leads to a current depreciation!

20 S Supply Demand S* Supply ' Demand ' S** Domestic Currency Depreciates 1 2

21 Students should be able to:  Use interest differentials to calculate expected depreciation rate under UIRP.  Use the Supply-Demand model of the forex model to explain: ◦ the effect of international trade conditions on the exchange rate. ◦ the impact of interest rates and other financial market conditions on exchange rates.


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