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chapter 7 The Foreign Exchange Market
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 2 Foreign Exchange Rates
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 3 The Foreign Exchange Market Definitions: 1.Spot exchange rate 2.Forward exchange rate 3.Appreciation 4.Depreciation Currency appreciates, country’s goods prices abroad and foreign goods prices in that country 1.Makes domestic businesses less competitive 2.Benefits domestic consumers FX traded in over-the-counter market 1.Trade is in bank deposits denominated in different currencies
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 4 Law of One Price Example: Canadian steel $100 per ton, Japanese steel 10,000 yen per ton If E = 50 yen/$ then prices are: Canadian SteelJapanese Steel In Canada$100$200 In Japan5000 yen10,000 yen If E = 100 yen/$ then prices are: Canadian SteelJapanese Steel In Canada$100$100 In Japan10,000 yen10,000 yen Law of one price E = 100 yen/$
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 5 Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) PPP Domestic price level 10%, domestic currency 10% 1.Application of law of one price to price levels 2.Works in long run, not short run Problems with PPP 1.All goods not identical in both countries: Toyota vs Chevy 2.Many goods and services are not traded: e.g. haircuts
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 6 PPP: Canada and U.S.
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 7 Factors Affecting E in Long Run Basic Principle: If factor increases demand for domestic goods relative to foreign goods, E
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 8 Expected Returns and Interest Parity RET e for FrancoisAl $ Depositsi D + (E e t+1 – E t )/E t i D F Depositsi F i F – (E e t+1 – E t )/E t Relative RET e i D – i F + (E e t+1 – E t )/E t i D – i F + (E e t+1 – E t )/E t Interest Parity Condition: $ and F deposits perfect substitutes i D = i F – (E e t+1 – E t )/E t Example:if i D = 10% and expected appreciation of $, (E e t+1 – E t )/E t, = 5% i F = 15%
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 9 Deriving RET F Curve Assume i F = 10%, E e t+1 = 1 euro/$ Point A:E t = 0.95RET F =.10 – (1 – 0.95)/0.95 =.048 = 4.8% B:E t = 1.00RET F =.10 – (1 – 1.0)/1.0 =.100 =10.0% C:E t = 1.05RET F =.10 – (1 – 1.05)/1.05 =.148 = 14.8% RET F curve connects these points and is upward sloping because when E t is higher, expected appreciation of F higher, RET F Deriving RET D Curve Points B, D, E, RET D = 10%: so curve is vertical Equilibrium RET D = RET F at E* If E t > E*, RET F > RET D, sell $, E t If E t < E*, RET F < RET D, buy $, E t
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 10 Equilibrium in the Foreign Exchange Market
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 11 Shifts in RET F RET F curve shifts right when 1.i F : because RET F at each E t 2.E e t+1 : because expected appreciation of F at each E t and RET F Occurs: 1) Domestic P , 2) Tariffs and quotas 3) Imports , 4) Exports , 5) Productivity Figure 7-4
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 12 Shifts in RET D RET D shifts right when 1. i D ; because RET D at each E t Assumes that domestic e unchanged, so domestic real rate Figure 7-5
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 13 Factors that Shift RET F and RET D
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 14 Response to i Because e 1. e , E e t+1 , expected appreciation of F , RET F shifts out to right 2. i D , RET D shifts to right However because e > i D , real rate , E e t+1 more than i D RET F out > RET D out and E t Figure 7-6
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 15 Response to M s 1. M s , P , E e t+1 expected appreciation of F , RET F shifts right 2. M s , i D , RET D shifts left Go to point 2 and E t 3. In the long run, i D returns to old level, RET D shifts back, go to point 3 and get Exchange Rate Overshooting Figure 7-7
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Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 7- 16 Why Exchange Rate Volatility? 1. Expectations of E e t+1 fluctuate 2. Exchange rate overshooting
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