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Financial and FX Regulation: From Capital Flows to Derivatives

Financial and FX Regulation: From Capital Flows to Derivatives. Nelson Barbosa August 23, 2011. The Role of Capital Controls. Macroeconomic management Technical and political limits to monetary and fiscal policy Permanent effects of temporary price deviations on economic development

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Financial and FX Regulation: From Capital Flows to Derivatives

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  1. Financial and FX Regulation:From Capital Flows to Derivatives Nelson Barbosa August 23, 2011

  2. The Role of Capital Controls Macroeconomic management • Technical and political limits to monetary and fiscal policy • Permanent effects of temporary price deviations on economic development Prudential regulation • Reduce FX vulnerability • Reduce pro-cyclicality of capital flows

  3. Evaluation of Capital Controls Entry controls: • Price controls (taxes) are more efficient than quantitative controls for macro management Exit controls • Not efficient in crises, reserve accumulation is the 2nd best policy Prudential controls • Best suited to deal with systemic risk

  4. The Recent Brazilian Experience Why? • Recent increase in commodity prices and international liquidity created excessive pressures on the exchange rate and domestic credit What? • Transaction tax (IOF) on new capital flows • Disincentive to high bank exposure in FX markets • Higher reserve and capital requirements for financial institutions • Quantitative Tightening vs Quantitative Easing

  5. Beyond Capital Flows • Derivatives’ operations can simulate the impact of capital flows with little effective flows – synthetic positions • Future and forward rates tend to define the spot rate in the Brazilian FX market • OTC operations increase financial and FX vulnerability without proper supervision • Example from the 2008 crisis: some Brazilian net exporters almost went broke

  6. Regulating Derivatives How do we measure systemic risk? • Consolidation, registration and standardization How much is too much? • Hedging vs speculation How to regulate? • Prudential limits to leverage • Taxes on margin deposits and on high net-exposure

  7. The Recent Brazilian Initiative • All FX derivatives must be registered in clearing houses • All FX must be priced according to the same method (measuring the delta) • The FX exposure of all agents must be consolidated • Excessive long positions on BRL pay a financial tax (1%).

  8. First Reactions • Positive response to registration • Resistance to common pricing of derivatives • Complexity of some contracts • Difficulty to consolidate across many markets • Negative response to taxation • Extra cost to hedging • Risk of financial disintermediation • Circumvention through foreign markets

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