Title: International Fixed Income
1International Fixed Income
2Outline
- Description
- Effect on international bond market
- local currency
- -denominated
- Examples
- ERM crisis (1992)
- peso crisis (12/94)
- russian default (8/98)
- Asian currency crisis (1997-98) (see
http//www.stern.nyu.edu/nroubini/asia/AsiaHomepa
ge.html)
3 I. Currency Crisis a First Look
- Central bank uses reserves to maintain XRs within
a band - For various reasons
- Domestic money demand falls
- Dom inflation, loss of competitiveness, economic
slow-down, corporate failure, foreign withdrawals
(political turmoil) - AND/OR
- Domestic money supply rises
- Fiscal financing via printing, excess dom credit
- Central bank loses reserves
- Crisis ( when reserves are exhausted(?) )
- withdrawal from peg into float
- withdrawal from convertibility into exchange
controls
time
4Review of XR Regimes
Source IMF publications, 1997
5Currency Crisis Uncertainty
- Non-zero minimal reserve threshold
- There may be an outside infusion (IMF aid, hence
negative minimal level) to allow more time for
correcting macroeconomic measures gt Peg may
survive an attack
6The Attack
- Reasons/triggers for a speculative attack may
vary - What is common?
- Investors are rational and forward looking
- When expected (risk adjusted?) return on DomXR
lower than FX, investors/speculators sell DomXR
and reserves decline - As a defense, domestic interest rates often rise.
Then it is the question of the probability, size
and timing of the devaluation - Investors see the end-game, and try to switch
from high yield domestic into hard currency just
at the right time - w.r.t. timing, look for coordination signals
7 Factors Affecting Speculative Attacks
- Factors which increase the sustainability of a
pegged rate - Large stock of reserves
- Low domestic rate of credit creation
- High demand for domestic money (high income / low
interest rates) - Low expected inflation in the case of a collapse
- Factors contributing to a currency crisis
- Overvalued domestic currency
- ltgt Large and persistent current account
deficit - Excess credit creation (vulnerable banking system
gt liquidity crunch) - Low FX reserve relative to short term sovereign
debt (liquidity) - Conflict in the gvmt policy objectives
- (government needs to subject dom monetary policy
resulting implications to pegging partners
currency fluctuations. May result in loss of
competitiveness, slowdown, unemployment gt
politically unsustainable)
8Predictive Currency Crisis Variables
- Rank leading indicators based on
- Probability of crisis given indicator signal
- Avg. number of month prior to signal that
indicator signal is issued - Persistence of signal ahead of crisis
- Most prominent signals
- Hard currency reserves
- Real exchange rates
- Domestic credit
- Credit to the public sector
- Domestic inflation
- Interest rate differential widens
- Equity crash
Source Kaminsky, Lizondo Reinhart, Leading
indicators of Currency Crisis, IMF WP 97/79,
July 1997
9Example Brazilian Real (1998-)
10Example Brazilian Real (1998-)
11Example Brazilian Real (1998-)
12Example Brazil -- 9/13/1998
- Reserves declined from 80Bil to 55Bil.
1Bil/day outflow rate that week - Stockmarket 75 lower y.t.d., 35 over the
previous month - Int Rate from 30pa to 50pa (approx. 5-7
inflation). Currency overvalued (?). - Deficit 8 of GDP
- Political scene election was in 3wks
- Effect on the US 15th largest trading partner,
1.7 of trade
13Contagion
- What do we mean by CONTAGION EFFECT ?
- Study examines crisis index in the post MexPeso
collapse - INDEXa(currency depr) b( loss in reserves)
- Index rises for countries w/ highly overvalued
RXR, low reserves, and a recent lending boom - gt The Tequila Effect is not random
- Some debate still exists
Source Sachs, Tornell Valasco, Financial
Crises in EM lessons from 1995, Brookings
Papers on Economic Activity N0.1 1996, 147-215
14Correlation breakdown
15Loose Ends
- Selection bias
- a currency crisis may or may not have developed
- (country may take pain now to avoid more pain in
the future) - How far is down?
- Currency likely to overshoot if/when devaluation
occurs - Exactly by how much is critical for speculators
profitability calculations - Speculators solve for
- Expected gain given a crisis VS expected loss w/o
one - Function of size, magnitude and timing of crisis
- Has a structural change in crises occurred (IMF
role) ? - gt PROFITABLE TRADING strategies may exist!
16II. International Bond Pricing
- Two primary effects
- Default premia for emerging market countries goes
up. (See next page graph from last class on Cetes
and Tesebonos). - Currency premia (from expected devaluation) goes
up. (See next page graph from last class on Cetes
and Tesebonos). - Both of these lead to increases in the bonds
yield, i.e, a severe drop in the bond price. - Secondary effect (though potentially important)
- Impact on US market via financial crisis.
- Contagion effect across other markets facing
similar issues. - Liquidity effect.
17III. Examples
- ERM crisis
- Peso crisis
- Russian debt default (during Asian Contagion)
18A. ERM crisis
- 1979 Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) led to stable
and narrow target zones among European countries - In 1992-93, however,
19Implied vol the GBP crash of 1992
DM/L
20Russia, -denominated 3, 2003
21Cetes Currency