Title: Law of One Price
1Law of One Price
- A single asset/commodity can have only one price
otherwise, markets cant clear. - Therefore interest rate parity (IRP) ensures that
the future values of money should be equal after
accounting for exchange and interest rates. - IRP is an arbitrage condition.
- If IRP didnt hold, arbitrage opportunities would
allow an astute trader to make a killing. - Since we rarely see arbitrage opportunities, we
know IRP holds.
2IRP Defined
- Formally,
- (F/S)(1 i) (1 ius)
- or
IRP is sometimes approximated as
3Example of IRP
- Suppose you have 100,000 to invest for one year.
- You can either
- invest in the U.S. at i. Future value
100,000(1 i) - trade your USD for JPY at the spot rate, invest
in Japan at i and hedge your exchange rate risk
by selling the future value of the Japanese
investment forward. The future value
100,000(F/S)(1 i). - ?Since both of these investments have the same
risk, they must have the same future
valueotherwise an arbitrage opportunity would
exist. - (F/S)(1 i) (1 ius)
4IRP and Covered Interest Arbitrage (CIA)
- If IRP failed to hold, an arbitrage would exist.
- Example
5IRP and CIA
- A trader with 1,000 to invest could invest in
the U.S. In 1 year her investment will be worth
1,071 1,000?(1 i) 1,000?(1.071) - Alternatively, this trader could exchange 1,000
for 800 at the prevailing spot rate 800
1,0001.25/. - She could then invest 800 at i 11.56 for 1
year to earn 892.48. - Translate 892.48 back into USD at F360(/)
1.20/, the 892.48 will be exactly 1,071.
6Interest Rate Parity Exchange Rate
Determination
- According to IRP only one 360-day forward rate,
- F360(/), can exist. It must be the case that
- F360(/) 1.20/
- Why?
- If F360(/) ? 1.20/, an astute trader could
make money with an arbitrage strategy.
7Arbitrage Strategy I(read on your own)
- If F360(/) 1.20/
- Borrow 1,000 at t 0 at i 7.1.
- Exchange 1,000 for 800 at the prevailing spot
rate, (note that 800 1,0001.25/) invest
800 at 11.56 (i) for 1 year to yield 892.48 - Translate 892.48 back into USD, if F360(/)
1.20/ , 892.48 will be more than enough to
repay your dollar obligation of 1,071.
8Arbitrage Strategy II(read on your own)
- If F360(/)
- Borrow 800 at t 0 at i 11.56 .
- Exchange 800 for 1,000 at the prevailing spot
rate, invest 1,000 at 7.1 for 1 year to
achieve 1,071. - Translate 1,071 back into GBP, if F360(/) 1.20/ , 1,071 will be more than enough to
repay your obligation of 892.48.
9IRP and Hedging Currency Risk
- You are a U.S. importer of British woolens and
have just ordered next years inventory. Payment
of 100M is due in 1 year. - IRP implies that there are 2 ways that you fix
the cash outflow - a) Put yourself in a position that delivers 100M
in 1 yeara long forward contract on the pound.
You will pay (100M)(1.2/) 120M - b) Form a forward market hedge as shown below.
10IRP and a Forward Market Hedge
To form a forward market hedge 1. Borrow
112.05 million in the U.S. (in one year you will
owe 120 million). 2. Translate 112.05 million
into GBP at the spot rate S(/) 1.25/ to
receive 89.64 million. 3. Invest 89.64 million
in the UK at i 11.56 for one year. 4. In 1
year your investment will have grown to 100
millionexactly enough to pay your supplier.
11Forward Market Hedge
Where do the numbers come from? We owe our
supplier 100 million in 1 yearso we know that
we need to have an investment with a future value
of 100 million. Since i 11.56 we need to
invest 89.64 million at the start of the year.
How many USD will it take to acquire 89.64
million at the start of the year if S(/)
1.25/?
12IRP Exchange Rate Determination
- On 2 (F/S)(1 i) (1 ius)
- What we really care about is F. F is the
expected value of the future spot rate given all
the info we know now. - F E(St1It) where It represents our current
information set. - Put these two equations together
13Uncovered Interest Rate Parity
- Further rearrange the terms from the last
equation and youll see that the difference
between the 2 countries interest rates is the
expected change in the exchange rate over the
period. - (i - ius) E(St1)-St/St E(e)
14Reasons for Deviations from IRP
- Transactions Costs
- The interest rate available to an arbitrageur for
borrowing, ib,may exceed the rate he can lend at,
il. - There may be bid-ask spreads to overcome, Fb/Sa F/S
- Thus
- (Fb/Sa)(1 il) ? (1 i b) ? 0
- Capital Controls
- Governments sometimes restrict import and export
of money through taxes or outright bans.
15Purchasing Power Parity
- PPP says that the exchange rate between 2
currencies should equal the ratio of the
countries price levels. - S Pa/Pb where S is the spot rate S(a/b).
- Absolute PPP means this holds precisely.
16Relative PPP Implications
- Relative PPP states that the rate of change in an
exchange rate (e) equals the differences in the
rates of inflation (p). - e ? - ?
- Note relative PPP uses more generality than
absolute PPP. - If U.S. inflation is 5 and U.K. inflation is 8,
the pound should depreciate by 3. - ? Application In 1998 Indonesias inflation rate
reached 77.54 while the US recorded 1.6 this
implied that the rupiah should depreciate 75.94
vs. the actual 72.5 depreciation.
17Source Vincenzo Quadrini
18Real Exchange Rate (RER)
- Nominal exchange rate what you see in the
newspaper (e.g. JPY/USD 118). - Real exchange rate a theoretical construct that
has real-world implications for the relative
values of two currencies. - RER is widely used as a benchmark.
- Traded goods explained by RER.
- Non-tradable goods not explained by RER.
19PPP Deviations and the Real Exchange Rate
- The real exchange rate is
- If PPP holds, (1 e) (1 ?)/(1 ?), then
q 1. - If q country improves with currency depreciations.
- If q 1, the competitiveness of the domestic
country deteriorates with currency appreciations.
Source McGraw/Hill
20Example of PPP RER
- Use q formula from previous page.
- (1pUS) 1.016
- (1pIndo) 1.7754
- (1e) 1.725
- q (1.016)/(1.77541.725)
- 0.3317
- Note this is an extreme example of a change in
PPP. Here Indonesias competitiveness shot up.
21A 2nd Example of PPP RER
- Use q formula from previous page.
- (1pUS) 1.024
- (1pCan) 1.039
- (1e) 0.9876
- q (1.024)/(1.0390.9876)
- 0.9979
- Note this is a more common example of a change in
PPP. Here Canada has a very minor competitive
advantage vis-à-vis the US.
22Big Mac Index
Source Vincenzo Quadrini
23How can we use PPP and the RER?
- For the most part PPP is used to figure out if a
currency is fairly valued. To that extent,
economists regularly report the real exchange
rate and how that compares to the nominal
exchange rate. Here, the gap indicates that q 1 for Indonesia.
Source ADB
24Politics of PPP RER
- International organizations report countries GDP
in US terms. What do you use to report the GDP?
PPP or nominal exchange rates? - Many analysts say PPP is more useful as it gives
a better indicator of the true strength of an
economy. This is especially relevant in
discussing countries such as China and India
(large but relatively poor economies). - Note that even these governments switch
methodologies depending on their target audience!
25The Fisher Effects
- An increase (decrease) in the expected rate of
inflation will cause a proportionate increase
(decrease) in the interest rate in the country. - For the U.S., the Fisher effect is written as
- i ? E(?)
- Where
- ? is the equilibrium expected real U.S.
interest rate - E(?) is the expected rate of U.S. inflation
- i is the equilibrium expected nominal U.S.
interest rate
Source McGraw/Hill
26International Fisher Effect
- If the Fisher effect holds in the U.S.
- i ? E(?)
- and the Fisher effect holds in Japan,
- i ? E(?)
- and if the real rates are the same in each
country (this assumes that unrestricted capital
flows have forced the rates to be equal) - ? ?
- then we get the International Fisher Effect
- E(e) i - i .
Source McGraw/Hill
27International Fisher Effect
- If the International Fisher Effect holds,
- E(e) i - i
- and if IRP also holds,
then forward parity holds
Source McGraw/Hill
28Equilibrium Exchange Rate Relationships
IFE
FP
PPP
IRP
FE
FRPPP
? - ?
Source McGraw/Hill
29Forecasting Techniques
- Let 100 flowers bloom ????
- Mao (but not in such a capitalist context!)
- 3 general types of forecasts
- Intuitive expectations should be sufficient ?
efficient market approach - Monetary policy ? fundamental approach.
- History ? technical approach.
30Efficient Market Approach
- Markets are efficient and fully reflect all
available information. - Markets will follow a random walk by changing
only when unpredicted events occur (i.e. new
information is received). This implies St
ESt1. - PPP can be interpreted as the markets consensus
forecast of the future exchange rates if the
markets are efficient. Ft ESt1 It. - Assuming markets are efficient, these two
equations contain all the necessary info to make
forecasts.
31Fundamental Approach
- Exceedingly technical. Widely used in banks.
- Heavy econometrics 3-step process
- Estimate structural model.
- Estimate future parameter values.
- Use the model to develop forecasts.
32Technical Approach
- History repeats itself.
- Data mining in search of patterns.
- Largely reliant on short-term and long-term
moving averages and divining patterns in the
graphs. - Not well-regarded in academia but extremely
popular among traders.
33Example of Technical Analysis
Source http//www.investavenue.com/article.html?I
D5761
34Chap 6 International Banking
- How are international and domestic banks
different? - Types of services offered
- Why would a domestic bank aspire to be
international?
35Structures of International Banks
- Correspondent bank
- Representative office
- Small service facility
- Foreign branch
- Operate like a local bank but legally part of
parent bank subject to home and host country
banking regulation. - Branch bank loan limit is based on the capital of
the parent bank, not of the branch. - Most popular way for US banks to expand overseas.
36Structures of Intl Banks (2)
- Subsidiary and affiliate banks
- Sub Locally incorporated bank that the foreign
parent either fully owns or partly-owns w/control
rights. - Aff Partially-owned but not controlled by its
foreign parent. - Both (1) operate under the laws of country of
incorporation (2) allowed to underwrite
securities - Edge Act banks
- Federally chartered subsidiaries of US banks that
are physically located in the US that are allowed
to engage in intl banking activities. - Unlike domestic commercial banks, these are
allowed to own equity in business corporations.
This allows US banks to own foreign banking
subsidiaries and take ownership stakes in foreign
banking affiliates.
37Structures of Intl Banks (3)
- Offshore banking centers
- Countries whose banking system is organized to
permit external accounts beyond the normal scope
of the country. - IMF recognizes the Bahamas, Bahrain, the Cayman
Islands, Hong Kong, the Netherlands Antilles,
Panama and Singapore. Note HK and Singapore
have evolved into full service international
banking centers. - Virtually total freedom from host country
governmental banking regulations. Note this is
not the same as no regulation. - International banking facilities
- A separate set of accounts that are segregated on
the parent banks books. - Not a unique physical or legal identity.
- Any US bank may have one only take deposits and
make loans to foreigners.
38Basle Accord History
- July 1988 current accord published
- End-1992 deadline for implementation
- Jan 1999 began discussion on new accord
- End-2001 publication of new accord
- 2004 scheduled implementation of revised accord
39Why have the Basle Accord?
- Bank regulators and depositors are all concerned
with the safety of bank deposits. - The accord created the concept of bank capital
adequacy to ensure that banks are reasonably
prepared to meet obligations. This is designed
to minimize the probability of bank failure and
the resultant damage if one occurs anyway. - Banks capital ratio (min 8) total capital
divided by sum of credit risk, market risk, and
operational risk. - The idea behind the denominator is that not all
loans are equally risky loans are therefore
weighted according to their intrinsic risk.
40Problems with Original Basle Accord
- One method doesnt fit all systems
- Should there be one global system or different
ones for developed and developing nations? - Business cycle
- Risk varies according to state of economy
- Ex US in 1999 vs. today.
- Didnt account for range of activities undertaken
by some banks (e.g. trading equities and
derivatives). - Prime example of why this system needed
modification Barings Bank, which collapsed in
1995 from derivative losses, looked good on paper
relative to capital adequacy standards.
41Proposed New Accord
- Places greater emphasis on banks own internal
methodologies - Greater flexibility in how risk is assessed and
capital adequacy measured - More risk sensitivity.
42International Money Market
- Eurocurrency is a time deposit in an
international bank located in a country other
than the country that issued the currency. - For example, Eurodollars are U.S.
dollar-denominated time deposits in banks located
abroad. - Euroyen are yen-denominated time deposits in
banks located outside of Japan. - The foreign bank doesnt have to be located in
Europe. The prefix Euro applies even if the
bank is located elsewhere.
43Eurocurrency Market
- External banking system that parallels but is
separate from the domestic banking system of
the country that issued the currency. Thus,
Eurodollar market has a lower cost structure (no
FDIC requirements apply) ? therefore it is
popular. - Operates at the interbank and/or wholesale level.
- Usually transactions are US1mn.
- Transaction rate is usually LIBOR London
Interbank Offered Rate.
44Eurocredits
- Eurocredits are short- to medium-term loans of
Eurocurrency. - The loans are denominated in currencies other
than the home currency of the Eurobank. - Often the loans are too large for one bank to
underwrite alone. Therefore banks will form a
syndicate to share the risk of the loan. - Eurocredits feature an adjustable rate. On
Eurocredits originating in London the base rate
is LIBOR. - Lending rate is LIBOR X where X is the lending
margin that is set based on the borrowers
creditworthiness.
45Example Pricing of a Eurocredit
- Same s as book example (p139) but using current
rates. - Borrow 3mn at LIBOR .75/annum on 1-month
rollover basis. - 1-month LIBOR 1.34
- Therefore in 1 month Teltrex owes interest of
3,000,000 (.0134 .0075)/12 5,225 - Suppose the loan was instead on a 3-month
rollover basis - 3-month LIBOR 1.35
- Then in 3 months Teltrex would owe interest of
3,000,000 (.0135 .0075)/4 15,750
46Forward Rate Agreement (FRA)
- A major risk in the Eurodeposit/Eurocredit market
is interest rate risk arising out of a possible
mismatch in deposit and credit maturities. - Example bank makes a 3-month loan using money
from a 6-month deposit. How will the deposit be
repaid if the 3-month loan doesnt generate
enough interest? - Forward Rate Agreements can be used to
- Hedge assets that a bank currently owns against
interest rate risk. - Speculate on the future course of interest rates.
47FRA contd
- An interbank contract in which
- the buyer agrees to pay the seller the increased
interest cost on a notional amount if interest
rates fall below an agreed rate. - The seller agrees to pay the buyer the increased
interest cost if interest rates increase above
the agreed rate. - FRAs are bought (sold) when one believes rates
will be higher (lower) in the future.
48Calculate FRA
- It is the absolute value of
- NA (SR AR) (N/360) / 1 (SR N/360)
- NA Notional Amount Value of loan
- AR agreement rate LIBOR on day of pricing
(e.g. today) - SR settlement rate LIBOR on day of collection
(e.g. in 3 months) - N term-length (e.g. 90 days for 3 month
contract) - Called a X against Y FRA for a X-month loan that
is made against a Y-month deposit. (Ex 6-month
loan against 12-month deposit ? Six against
Twelve FRA.)
49FRA Example
- This is a Three against Six FRA where the bank
has made a 3-month Eurodollar loan against an
offsetting 6-month Eurodollar deposit. - Notional amount US5mn. 3-month LIBOR (AR) is
1.3. Let the SR be 1.5. Say there are 91 days
in the 3-month period. - The bank would expect to receive US5mn .013
(91/360) 16,431 as the base amount of interest
when the loan is rolled over in three months.
(NA AR N/360) - But SR AR ? the bank will actually receive
US5mn .015 (91/360) 18,958. (NA SR
N/360) (Profit 2,527)
50FRA Example
- Since SR AR the purchasing bank profits from
the FRA it bought. In 91 days it will receive
the absolute value of this gain. - Suppose the purchasing bank accurately predicted
the SR. It would want to know what the present
value of the gain from the FRA is worth. The
absolute present value is US5mn (.015-.013)
91/360 / 1 (.015 91/360) 2,518. NA
(SR-AR) (N/360) / 1 (SR N/360) - But, what if SR would have been paid by the buyer exactly the
same amount of money it would have made had it
done absolutely nothing with the sum of money.
In short, this wouldve been a zero-sum game.
51Return briefly to the Basle Accord
- Why are we paying so much attention to the
possibility that a bank might lose money if the
interest rates on loans deposits arent in its
favor? - If banks miscalculate their exposure and assume
too much risk, possible implosion of system could
occur. - If banks in one country have too high a default
rate, it could have an international ripple
effect.
52So why Basle?
- So, to prevent the occurrence of an international
debt crisis, the Basle accord requires banks to
maintain an 8 capital adequacy ratio. - The ratio ensures that banks hold enough equity
capital and other securities as reserves against
risky assets. This reduces the probability of
bank failure.
53Technical Result of Basle VAR
- VAR value at risk the loss that will be
exceeded with a specified probability over a
specified time horizon. - This determines the capital adequacy ratio.
- VAR (Portfolio value) (Daily standard
deviation of return) (Confidence Interval
Factor) (Horizon length)1/2 - Imprecise concept as the inputs cant be measured
precisely. Hence, the CAR is useful but not
perfect.
54Suppose the safety net breaks?
- If a bank failed even with all these safety
procedures in place, how would this play out? - Look at Mexico and the resultant Latin American
Crisis in the 80s. - Led to development of debt-for-equity swaps as
part of debt rescheduling agreements among bank
lending syndicates and debtor nations.
55Debt-for-equity swaps
- Creditor banks sell loans for US at discounts
from face value to MNEs. - The MNEs want to make equity investments in
subsidiaries or local firms in the less developed
countries. - The local countrys central bank then buys the
bank debt from the MNE at a smaller discount than
the MNE paid but in the local currency. - The MNE then uses the local currency to make a
pre-approved investment in the country.
56Example of Debt-for-equity swap
- Honda buys 100mn of local debt from the Mexican
central bank at 55 of face value. Cost to MNE
55 mn. - The Mexican government then buys the debt from
Honda at 75 of face value. Cost to govt 75
mn. - Honda then has 75 mn in local currency and opens
Honda Mexico, which is a pre-approved investment
in the tropical country.
57Another example(based on p.145)
- Volkswagen paid 170 mn for 283 mn in Mexican
debt, which it swapped for the equivalent of 260
mn of pesos. - What is the discount from face value that
Volkswagen paid? 170/283 .60 ? 40 discount. - What is the discount that the govt paid?
260/283 .919 ? 8.1 discount.
58Who gains and why?
- Creditor bank removes an unproductive loan from
its books. Gets some portion of the principal
repaid. (Repays most when discount is lowest.) - MNE gets bid-ask spread on the loan (how much
more does the govt give for the loan then you
paid for it?). - Host country can pay off a hard currency loan
with the capital raised by sale of loan to MNE.
In addition, the host country is positioned to
make long-term gain from productivity of the
MNEs new investment.
59Brady Bonds
- Alternative to the debt-for-equity mechanism we
just examined. Brady bonds arose from an effort
in the 1980s to reduce the debt held by
less-developed countries that were frequently
defaulting on loans. - U.S. dollar-denominated bond issued by an
emerging market, particularly those in Latin
America, and collateralized by U.S. Treasury
zero-coupon bonds.
60Brady Bonds (2)
- Defaulted loans were converted into bonds with
U.S. zero-coupon Treasury bonds as collateral.
Because the Brady bonds were backed by
zero-coupon bonds, repayment of principal was
insured. - The Brady bonds themselves are coupon-bearing
bonds with a variety of rate options (fixed,
variable, step, etc.) with maturities of between
10 and 30 years. Issued at par or at a discount,
Brady bonds often include warrants for raw
materials available in the country of origin or
other options.