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International capital market integration International macro, miniterm III, January 2007
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Increasing capital mobility Breakdown of the Bretton-Woods system of exchange rates in 1972 Fast growth of Eurocurrency markets Technological advances in information reduced arbitrage opportunities General trend for deregulations of markets European monetary union and introduction of Euro
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Measuring degree of capital mobility: Saving-investment correlations Feldstein and Horioka, “Domestic Saving and International Capital Flows,” Economic Journal 90, June 1980, 314-29. –If capital was highly mobile across countries then corr (S,I) were close to zero Closed economy S=I, corr (S,I)=1 Small open economy, perfect capital mobility CA=S-I, r is exogenous, savings and investments are affected by independent factors, corr (S,I)=0
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Measuring degree of capital mobility: saving- investment correlations
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Positive relationship between saving and investment rates are also observed within countries over time. For OECD countries, for 1974-1990 it was equal to 0.495 corr (S,I) was weakening over time reflecting increasing capital mobility. Frankel (1993) has shown that for US: –corr (S,I)=0.86 for 1929-1979 –corr (S,I)=0.03 for 1981-1987
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US saving and investment rates: evidence of increased capital mobility over time
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Feldstein-Horioka puzzle and capital mobility Even under the perfect capital mobility, saving and investment rates can move together: increase in productivity can have a positive impact on both, S and I Large open economy effect: factors that have a positive impact on savings will also reduce world interest rate r*
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Measuring capital mobility: interest rate differentials Under assumption of perfect capital mobility, the rate of return on financial investment should be equalized across countries Cross-country interest rate differentials would indicate restrictions on international capital flows
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Uncovered interest rate parity Suppose that an investor has $1 –i is US interest rate –i* is German interest rate –S is spot exchange rate in $US per Euro –S’ is spot exchange rate at the end of investment period To prevent arbitrage it should be the case that: However, S’ is not known at the beginning of investment period. But…
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Covered interest rate parity …investor can secure certain exchange rate, F $US dollars per 1 Euro using forward exchange rate market! Therefore, the following equality should hold if capital is perfectly mobile:
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Example, as of January 29 th, 2007 US 3 month interest rate is i=5.24% Euro 3 month interest rate is i*=3.76% Spot exchange rate is S=1.291 $US per Euro 3 months forward rate is F=1.297 $US per Euro You should invest in Euro because
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Arbitrage Borrow $1bln Exchange in Euro at spot rate: 774.6 mln Euro Invest in Euro assets Buy $1.0131 bln at the forward market (no payments at this point!) In 3 months, your investment yields 781.87 mln Euro Execute forward contract: purchase $1.0131 bln for 781.11 mln Euro Your profit is 760,000 Euro No risk involved, no initial capital is needed!!!
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Alternative approach: differentials between domestic deposit rates and Eurocurrency deposit rates. For example, it compares interest rates on French franc deposits in France with interest rates on French franc deposits in London
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Real interest rate differentials and capital market integration In the model of small open economy the real interest rate, r, is exogenously determined by the world real interest rate, r*. Testing r=r*
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Real interest rate differentials Real interest rate differentials are not a good indicators of capital mobility! The difference in real interest rates across countries is equal to zero only if: –Relative price of consumption baskets across countries does not change over time –People are risk neutral or there is no nominal exchange rate uncertainty
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Decomposition of the real exchange rate There are three terms on the right hand side: i The degree of capital mobility ii Nominal exchange rate risk iii Expected changes in relative prices across countries
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Decomposition of the real interest rate differentials
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Exchange risk premium, f-s e Measures the percentage difference between the forward and the expected future spot exchange rates If there is no uncertainty: S e =F If agents are risk neutral and S e >F: –Buy euros in the forward market is profitable –The forward exchange rate F is going up –Until S e =F Since exchange risk premium is not zero, there is uncertainty or people are not risk neutral or both
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Expected real depreciation, s e -s+π *e - π e Real exchange rate e is defined as: e=(S*P * )/P When e increases (real depreciation of domestic currency), foreign consumption becomes more expensive relative to domestic consumption. Decline in e is called real appreciation of domestic currency
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Expected real depreciation
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Back to real interest rate differentials country premium is positive exchange risk premium is positive real exchange rate is expected to depreciate
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