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R. GLENN HUBBARD ANTHONY PATRICK R. GLENN HUBBARD ANTHONY PATRICK

R. GLENN HUBBARD ANTHONY PATRICK - PowerPoint Presentation

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R. GLENN HUBBARD ANTHONY PATRICK - PPT Presentation

OBRIEN Money Banking and the Financial System The Market for Foreign Exchange C H A P T E R 8 LEARNING OBJECTIVES After studying this chapter you should be able to 81 82 83 Explain the difference between nominal ID: 701458

rates exchange foreign rate exchange rates rate foreign dollar dollars demand run currency supply interest banks financial yen price model short parity

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Slide1

R. GLENN

HUBBARDANTHONY PATRICKO’BRIEN

Money,

Banking, and

the Financial SystemSlide2

The Market for Foreign Exchange

C H A P T E R

8

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

After studying this chapter, you should be able to:

8.1

8.2

8.3

Explain the difference between nominal

and real

exchange rates

Explain how markets for foreign

exchange operate

Explain how exchange rates are

determined in

the long run

8.4

Use a demand and supply model to

explain how

exchange rates are determined in

the short

runSlide3

WHY WOULD THE U.S. FEDERAL RESERVE LEND DOLLARS

TO FOREIGN CENTRAL BANKS?

The world of international finance has become highly

interconnected.

The

Federal Reserve

can no longer ignore

how its policies

affect other countries or how events in other countries affect the U.S

. economy.

During the financial crisis of 2007–2009, the

Federal Reserve established dollar liquidity swap lines with foreign central

banks, which facilitated the exchange of dollars for an equivalent amount of foreign currency

and allowed foreign banks to make dollar loans.

The increased volume

of transactions across countries makes fluctuations in exchange rates an important concern of

policymakers.An Inside Look at Policy

on page 244 discusses the impact of the European debt crisis of 2010 on the demand for the U.S. dollar.

C H A P T E R

8

The Market for Foreign ExchangeSlide4

Key Issue and Question

Issue:

During the 2007–2009 financial crisis, exchange rates proved to be particularly volatile,

and the

Federal Reserve and other central banks took coordinated policy actions to help stabilize

the international

financial system.

Question: Why did the value of the U.S. dollar soar during the height of the financial crisis?Slide5

8.1

Learning Objective

Explain the difference between nominal and real exchange rates.Slide6

Nominal exchange

rate The price of one currency in terms of another currency; also called the exchange rate.Appreciation An increase in the value of a currency in exchange

for another currency.

Depreciation

A

decrease in the value of a currency in exchange

for another currency.

When individuals or firms in the United States import or export goods or make investments in other countries, they need to convert dollars into foreign currencies.

Fluctuations in the exchange rate between the dollar and foreign currencies affect the prices that U.S. consumers pay for foreign imports.

Exchange Rates and TradeSlide7

Making the Connection

What’s the Most Important

Factor in

Determining Sony’s Profits?

In the long run, Sony’s profitability depends on its ability to

develop innovative

new products, produce them at a low cost, and market them well

to consumers.

In the short

run, Sony’s profits depend on the prices it charges relative to the prices its competitors charge for comparable products.

Since Sony sells most of its goods outside of Japan, fluctuations in exchange rates will affect its foreign currency prices.Sony

estimates that an appreciation of the yen from ¥95 = $1 to ¥85 = $1 reduces the firm’s profits by about ¥10 billion.Not surprisingly, Sony CEO Howard Stringer and the top managers of other

Japanese firms continue to explore ways of cushioning the impact of fluctuations in the value of the yen on the profitability of their firms.

Exchange Rates and TradeSlide8

Figure 8.1

Foreign-Exchange Cross

Rates

Foreign-exchange

rates can be

expressed as

either U.S. dollars

per unit

of foreign currency or as units of foreign currency per

U.S. dollar.Reading across the rows, we have the direct quotations, while reading down the columns, we

have the indirect quotations.For example, the second entry in the U.S. row shows that the exchange rate on this day was $1.2927 per euro (€). The

last entry in the U.S. Dollar column shows that the exchange rate can also be expressed as €0.7736 per dollar.•

Exchange Rates and TradeSlide9

Is It Dollars per Yen or Yen per Dollar?

Exchange rates quoted as units of domestic currency per unit of foreign currency are referred to as direct quotations. Indirect quotations express exchange rates as units of foreign currency per unit of domestic currency.

Figure 8.2

Fluctuations in Exchange Rates, 2000–2010

The panels show fluctuations in the exchange rates between the United

States dollar

and the yen, the Canadian dollar, and the euro

. Because

we are

measuring the

exchange rate on the vertical axis as dollars per unit of foreign currency, an increase in the exchange rate represents a depreciation of the dollar and

an appreciation

of the other currency. •

Exchange Rates and TradeSlide10

Nominal Exchange Rates

versus

Real Exchange Rates

Real exchange rate

The rate

at which goods

and services

in one country can

be exchanged for

goods and

services in

another country.

We use the real exchange rate when we are interested in knowing how much of another country’s goods and services you can buy with a U.S.

dollar. For example, the real exchange rate between the dollar and the pound in terms of Big Macs is:

Similarly, we can derive the real exchange rate between the dollar and the pound using the nominal exchange rate and the price

levels in each country:

Exchange Rates and TradeSlide11

8.2

Learning Objective

Explain how markets for foreign exchange operate.Slide12

Foreign-Exchange Markets

Foreign-exchange market An over-the-counter market where international currencies are traded.If

you want to buy foreign stocks or bonds, you must convert

U.S. dollars

into the appropriate

currency.

The large commercial banks are called market makers because they are willing to buy and sell the major currencies at any time

.Most foreign-exchange trading takes place among commercial banks located in London

, New York, and Tokyo, with secondary centers in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Zurich.With daily trading in the trillions of dollars, the

foreign-exchange market is one of the largest financial markets in the world. Participants include investment portfolio managers and central banks.Slide13

Forward and Futures Contracts in Foreign Exchange

In the foreign-exchange market, spot market transactions involve an exchange of currencies or bank deposits immediately (subject to a two-day settlement period) at the current exchange rate.In

forward transactions

, traders agree today to a

forward contract

to exchange

currencies or bank deposits on a specific future date at an exchange rate known as the forward rate.

Futures contracts in foreign exchange also exist. They are traded on exchanges, such as the CBOT, and are standardized in terms of quantity and

settlement date. The exchange reduces counterparty risk, which in turn reduces default risk.In foreign exchange markets, the

amount of trading in forward contracts is at least 10 times greater than the amount of trading in futures contracts.Call and put

options contracts are also available on foreign exchange.

Foreign-Exchange MarketsSlide14

Exchange-Rate Risk, Hedging, and Speculating

Exchange-rate risk The risk that a firm will suffer losses because of fluctuations in exchange rates.

The forward rate

reflects

what traders

in the

forward market expect the spot exchange rate between the dollar and pound to be in 90 days, so it may not equal the current spot rate.To

hedge against a fall in the value of the pound, a firm sells pounds in the forward market; to hedge against a rise in the value of the pound,

a firm buys pounds in the forward market.A hedger uses derivatives markets to reduce risk, while a speculator

uses derivatives markets to place a bet on the future value of a currency.Firms and investors can also use options contracts to hedge or to speculate.

The disadvantage of speculating with options contracts is that their prices are higher than are the prices of forward contracts.

Foreign-Exchange MarketsSlide15

Making the Connection

Can Speculators Drive Down the Value of a Currency?

In early 2010, a controversy erupted over whether the managers of hedge funds

were conspiring

to earn billions of dollars by driving down the price of the euro.

In

February 2010, the managers of four

hedge funds

met in New York City to discuss whether it would be profitable to use

derivatives to bet that the value of the euro would fall.

The U.S. Department of Justice thought that their actions might be illegal and

opened an investigation. The fund managers claimed that they were just exchanging ideas on an investment opportunity rather than conspiring to take actions that were intended to drive down the value of the euro in exchange for the dollar.

But, as we will see, exchange rates among major currencies such as the euro and the dollar are determined by factors that a few hedge fund managers probably

can’t affect, however large those funds.

Foreign-Exchange MarketsSlide16

8.3

Learning Objective

Explain how exchange rates are determined in the long run.Slide17

Exchange Rates in the Long Run

Law of one price The fundamental economic idea that identical products should sell for the same price everywhere.

The Law of One Price and the Theory of Purchasing Power Parity

Theory of

purchasing power

parity (PPP)

The theory

that exchange rates move to equalize the purchasing power of different currencies

.In the context of international trade, the law of one

price is the basis for the theory of purchasing power parity (PPP).

In other words, in the long run, exchange rates should be at a level that makes it possible to buy the same amount of goods and services with the equivalent amount of any country’s currency.Slide18

The Law of One Price and the Theory of Purchasing Power Parity

Once the exchange rate reflects the purchasing power of the two currencies, the opportunity for arbitrage profits is eliminated. This mechanism appears to guarantee that exchange rates will be at their PPP levels.

PPP makes an important prediction about movements in exchange rates in

the long

run: If one country has a higher inflation rate than another country, the

currency of

the high-inflation country will depreciate relative to the currency of the low-inflation country.

Real exchange rate between the dollar and the pound =

Exchange Rates in the Long RunSlide19

The Law of One Price and the Theory of Purchasing Power Parity

We can rearrange terms to arrive at an expression for the nominal exchange rate in

terms of

the real exchange rate and the price levels in the two countries:

If

prices in the United States increase on average faster than prices in Great

Britain, then

to maintain PPP, the value of the dollar will have to depreciate relative to

the value of the pound.

Exchange Rates in the Long RunSlide20

Is PPP a Complete Theory of Exchange Rates?

1. Not all products can be traded internationally.2. Products are differentiated.

3. Governments

impose barriers to trade.

Tariff

A tax a government imposes on imports.

Quota A limit a government imposes

on the quantity of a good that can be imported.

Three real-world complications keep purchasing power parity from being a complete explanation of exchange rates:

Exchange Rates in the Long RunSlide21

Solved Problem

8.3

Should Big Macs Have the Same Price Everywhere?

The

Economist

magazine tracks

the

prices

of the

McDonald’s Big Machamburger in countries around the

world.The following table shows the price

of Big Macs in the United States andin six other countries, along with the

exchange rate between that country’scurrency and the U.S. dollar.

a. Explain whether the statistics in the table are consistent with the theory of purchasing power parity.

b. Explain whether your results in part (a) mean that arbitrage profits exist in the market for Big Macs.

Exchange Rates in the Long RunSlide22

Solved Problem

8.3

Should Big Macs Have the Same Price Everywhere?

Solving the Problem

Step 1

Review the chapter material.

Step 2

Answer part (a) by determining whether the theory of purchasing

power parity applies to Big Macs

.We can convert the price of a Big Mac in a given country to its price in dollars. For example, in the case of Japan: ¥330

/(¥93.2/$) = $3.54.

Exchange Rates in the Long RunSlide23

Solved Problem

8.3

Should Big Macs Have the Same Price Everywhere?

Solving the Problem

Step 3

Answer part (b) by explaining whether arbitrage profits exist in the

market for

Big Macs

.

Exchange Rates in the Long Run

It is not possible to make arbitrage profits by buying low-price Big Macs in one country and selling them in another. The

theory of

purchasing power

parity does not provide a complete explanation of

exchange rates because many

goods—such as Big Macs—cannot be

traded internationally.Slide24

8.4

Learning Objective

Use a demand and supply model to explain how exchange rates are determined in the short run.Slide25

A Demand and Supply Model of

Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesA Demand and Supply Model of Exchange Rates

By

assuming that

price levels

are constant, our model will determine

both the equilibrium nominal exchange rate and the equilibrium real exchange rate.

The demand for U.S. dollars represents the demand by households and firms outside the United States for U.S. goods and U.S. financial assets.

The supply of dollars in exchange for yen is determined by the willingness of households and firms that own dollars to exchange them for yen.Slide26

A Demand and Supply Model of Exchange Rates

Figure 8.3

The Demand and

Supply of

Foreign Exchange

The lower the exchange rate,

the cheaper

it is to convert a

foreign currency

into dollars and the larger the quantity of dollars

demanded. So, the demand curve for dollars in exchange for yen is downward sloping.

The higher the exchange rate, the more yen households or firms will receive in exchange for dollars and

the larger the quantity of dollars supplied. The supply curve of dollars in exchange for yen is

upward sloping because the quantity of dollars supplied will increase as the exchange rate increases.

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide27

Shifts in the Demand and Supply for Foreign Exchange

Figure 8.4

(1 of 2)

The Effect of Changes in the Demand and Supply for Dollars

Panel (a) illustrates the effect of an increase in the demand for dollars in

exchange for

yen

.

The

demand curve for dollars shifts to the right, causing the equilibrium exchange rate to increase from ¥80 = $1 to ¥85 = $1 and the

equilibrium quantity of dollars traded to increase from Dollars1 to Dollars2.

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide28

Shifts in the Demand and Supply for Foreign Exchange

Figure 8.4

(2 of 2)

The Effect of Changes in the Demand and Supply for Dollars

Panel (b

) illustrates the effect of an increase in the supply of dollars in exchange

for yen.

The

supply curve for dollars in exchange for yen shifts to the right, causing the

equilibrium exchange rate to decrease from ¥80 = $1 to ¥75 = $1 and the equilibrium quantity of dollars traded to increase from Dollars1 to Dollars2.•

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide29

The “Flight to Quality”

during the Financial Crisis

Figure 8.5

Movements in

the Trade-Weighted Exchange

Rate of

the U.S

.

Dollar

The increase in the value of

the dollar

during the late 1990s, as shown in the figure, was driven by strong demand from foreign investors

for U.S. stocks and bonds, particularly U.S. Treasury securities. Something similar happened during

the financial crisis of 2007–2009: As many foreign investors sought a safe haven in U.S. Treasury securities, the

demand for dollars increased.

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide30

The Interest-Rate Parity Condition

In this section, we explore the implications of international capital mobility for the determination of exchange rates.To purchase

Japanese

bonds, you have to exchange your dollars for

yen, thereby

assuming some

exchange-rate risk: While your funds are invested in Japanese bonds, the value of the yen might decline relative to the dollar.

To eliminate the possibility of arbitrage profits, the difference between the

interest rates on a Japanese bond and a U.S. bond must equal the expected change in the exchange rate between the yen and the dollar.

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide31

The Interest-Rate Parity Condition

Interest-rate parity condition The proposition that differences in interest rateson similar bonds in different countries reflect expectations of future changes in

exchange rates.

We can state this condition generally as

:

Interest

rate on domestic bond = Interest rate on foreign bond

– Expected appreciation of the domestic currency.

If the expected return from owning a foreign asset—including expected changes in the exchange rate—isn’t the same as the return from owning a domestic asset, then investors can make arbitrage profits because one

asset or the other will be underpriced relative to its expected return.

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide32

The Interest-Rate Parity Condition

Differences in interest rates on similar bonds in different countries do not always reflect expectations of future changes in exchange rates for several reasons:1. Differences in default risk and liquidity.

2. Transactions costs.

3. Exchange-rate risk.

To account for the

additional risk of investing in a foreign asset

we can include

a currency premium

in the interest-rate parity equation:Interest rate on the domestic bond = Interest rate on the foreign bond

– Expected appreciation of the domestic currency – Currency premium.

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide33

Solved Problem

8.4

An investor wrote the following to the financial

advice column

of an online

magazine:

It says in the papers that interest rates in Japan are under

1%.

U.S. Treasury bills currently pay almost 5%. Why

isn’t everybody borrowing money in Japan and investing it in the United States? It seems like a sure thing.Is it a sure thing?

Can You Make Money from Interest Rate Differences

across Countries?

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide34

Solved Problem

8.4

Solving the Problem

Step 1

Review the chapter material.

Step 2

Answer the question by using the interest-rate parity condition to

explain the relationship between expected changes in exchange rates and differences in

interest rates across countries.

Can You Make Money from Interest Rate Differences across Countries?

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange Rates

If the interest-rate parity condition

holds, then

a 4-percentage-point gap between the interest rate on a U.S. bond and

the interest

rate on a similar Japanese bond means that investors must be

expecting that the value of the dollar will depreciate against the yen by 4%: 5% = 1 – (– 4%).

Therefore, the expected return on a U.S. investment and a Japanese investment should be the same. A U.S. investor who borrows money at 1% in Japan

and invests it at 5% in the United States will not gain anything if the

dollar depreciates

by 4% because the true cost of the investor’s yen loan will

be 5

% rather than 1%. In addition, the investor will be taking on

exchange-rate risk

because the dollar could depreciate by more than 4%.Slide35

Making the Connection

Why Did the Fed Lend Dollars to Foreign Central

Banks during

the Financial Crisis?

Before the financial crisis of 2007–2009, many economists and policymakers had

been unaware

of the extent to which foreign banks, particularly in Europe, had been

buying dollar-denominated

assets, especially securitized debt, such as mortgage-backed securities

.Banks began to actively buy and sell securities,

while securitization—the transformation of mortgage loans and other business and consumer debt into marketable bonds—increased the volume of dollar-denominated securities available

for European banks to invest in.Banks financed their investments by borrowing dollars from other banks, from central banks, and by engaging in foreign-exchange swaps.

Banks faced considerable funding risk because the maturities of these

funding sources were very short compared with the maturities of the dollar-denominated assets.

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide36

Making the Connection

Why Did the Fed Lend Dollars to Foreign Central

Banks during

the Financial Crisis?

European banks had difficulty selling their dollar-denominated assets because

the markets

for many of these assets, particularly mortgage-backed and similar

securities, were

rapidly declining, which made many of the assets

illiquid.To deal with the resulting dollar shortage, in December 2007, the Federal Reserve, in

conjunction with 14 foreign central banks, established the dollar liquidity swap lines.

At the peak of the financial crisis in late 2008, the volume of dollar swaps was about $600 billion. As the financial crisis eased, so did foreign central banks’ use of the swap lines.

We conclude that banks and other financial firms have significant investments in securities denominated in foreign currencies, and central banks are

willing to cooperate to deal with financial crises.(continued)

A Demand and Supply Model of Short-Run Movements in Exchange RatesSlide37

Answering the Key Question

At the beginning of this chapter, we asked the question

:

“Why did the value of the U.S. dollar soar during the height of the financial crisis

?”

We have seen that a desire by foreign investors to buy U.S. stocks and bonds will increase the

demand for

dollars in exchange for other

currencies.

An increase in the demand for dollars increases the exchange rate. During the peak of the financial crisis from the summer of 2008 to the fall of

2009, many foreign investors saw buying U.S. Treasuries as a safer investment than many alternatives. As

a result, the value of the dollar soared by more than 20%.Slide38

AN

INSIDE LOOK AT POLICY

Investors Buy Dollars and

Sell Euros

as Europe Faces a Debt Crisis

ASSOCIATED PRESS,

Growth

, Rate Worries

Drive Euro Near 4-Year Low

In May 2010, the exchange rate of the euro against the U.S. dollar approached its lowest level in four years

.The euro’s

slide was the result of a nearly $1 trillion attempt to address debt problems at a time when European countries were facing weak economic growth.

Interest rates in the United States were expected to fall as foreign

investors shifted from European debt to U.S. bonds.Analysts were

concerned that the emergency funding deal could constrain Europe if investors feared for the stability of the banking sector

.Investors worried about the debts of Greece and other European countries, such as Portugal and Spain. These

events caused a decline in the demand for euros and euro-denominated debt.Key Points in the ArticleSlide39

AN

INSIDE LOOK AT POLICY

The figure below illustrates the impact on the value of the dollar and the euro after a

decline in the demand

for euros

and euro-denominated debt.