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FIN 40500: International Finance

FIN 40500: International Finance. Exchange Rate “Fundamentals”. Economic models represent an attempt to explain various phenomena with observable variables. Economic Model. Exogenous Variables. Endogenous Variables. These variables are what we are taking as “given”.

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FIN 40500: International Finance

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  1. FIN 40500: International Finance Exchange Rate “Fundamentals”

  2. Economic models represent an attempt to explain various phenomena with observable variables. Economic Model Exogenous Variables Endogenous Variables These variables are what we are taking as “given” These variables are what we are trying to explain An economic model is simply a set of assumptions Lets start with a simply one…

  3. Demand is an economic model to explain consumer choices. • Exogenous Variables • Income • Price Endogenous Variable Economic Model Consumers maximize utility ( Quantity demanded is a function of income and price)

  4. Equilibrium models use supply and demand to explain price • Exogenous Variables • Income • Costs Endogenous Variable Economic Model Price adjusts to clear the market ( Price is a function of income and costs)

  5. Ultimately, the point is to use the economic model to pricing function that we can estimate empirically (+) (+) Parameters to be estimated Once we have an estimated pricing function, we can use it to forecast Forecasts for income and costs

  6. General Equilibrium Models try to explain multiple prices simultaneously using multiple markets

  7. Any international general equilibrium must have at least four commodities Foreign Currency (M*) Pays no interest, but needed to buy foreign goods Home Currency (M) Pays no interest, but needed to buy goods Foreign Bonds (B*) Pays interest rate (i*), payable in foreign currency Domestic Bonds (B) Pays interest rate (i)

  8. Benny Fluffy Foreign Bond Market Domestic Bond Market Households choose a combination of the four assets for their portfolios Domestic Money Market Currency Market Foreign Money Market

  9. Foreign Bond Market Domestic Bond Market We need five prices to clear all five markets Domestic Money Market Currency Market Foreign Money Market

  10. The parity conditions can make things a lot simpler! Purchasing Power Parity Currency Markets Uncovered Interest Parity

  11. Foreign Bond Market Domestic Bond Market The parity conditions eliminate the need for three markets!! Foreign Money Market Currency Market Domestic Money Market Hence, this story is called “The Monetary Approach”

  12. Cash is used to buy goods (transaction motive), but pays no interest + - + Higher prices raises money demand Higher real income raises money demand Money Demand Higher interest rates lower money demand Money supply is assumed to be purely exogenous (a policy variable of the government)

  13. If prices are too high, there won’t be enough money available to buy all the goods and services available - + If prices are too low, there is excess money floating around An equilibrium price level clears the money market (i.e. supply equals demand)

  14. An increase in money supply raises the price level - + At the initial price, there is an excess supply of currency As the government makes more currency available, demand for goods and services increases. This allows suppliers to raise their prices.

  15. An increase in real income raises the demand for money – this lowers the price level (holding money supply fixed) An increase in interest rates lowers money demand – this raises the price level (holding money supply fixed)

  16. If we assign a particular functional form to money demand, we can solve for the equilibrium price level analytically. - + If we set money supply equal to money demand and solve for price, we get

  17. We can assume that the foreign money market is identical to the domestic money market. Using PPP and the two Money Market equilibrium conditions, we get the “fundamentals” for a currency Foreign Money Market Domestic Money Market PPP Now, solve for the exchange rate

  18. Taking the previous expression and solving for the exchange rate, we get Relative Money Stocks Relative Interest Rates Relative Outputs These are known as currency “fundamentals”

  19. A regression using fundamentals would generally take the form: Percentage change in exchange rate (dollars per foreign currency) – an increase is a dollar depreciation Parameters to be estimated Implied by the monetary framework Estimated parameters of this regression are often statistically insignificant:

  20. Note that while the “fundamentals” seem to track the general trend of the dollar, they don’t pick up the shorter term movements Fundamentals USD/JPY

  21. The fact is that fundamentals just don’t exhibit enough variance to explain exchange rate movements in the short term Fundamentals USD/GBP

  22. Recall that PPP often fails in the short run. This is possibly due to trading friction or relative price changes Real Exchange Rate Real exchange rate changes create a problem…they tend to follow random walks (i.e. unit root processes for you statistics buffs) and are, hence, unpredictable.

  23. Does anybody remember why the dollar depreciated sharply in the mid-eighties? Real depreciation of the dollar relative to the Yen

  24. Recall that UIP implies that the differences in nominal interest rates reflects expectations of currency price changes (countries with high interest rates should expect their currencies to depreciate Uncovered Interest Parity This incorporates an expectation of the future into the fundamentals

  25. Suppose that expectations are stable (i.e. coincide with future fundamentals Continue the substitution process forward Today’s currency price depends on ALL future fundamentals!

  26. Alternatively, its possible for expectations to be destabilizing (i.e. speculative bubbles) Some “non-fundamental” factor Continue the substitution process forward A “Bubble” Term!!

  27. Why don’t trade deficits matter in the monetary approach? Remember, this framework assumes that PPP and UIP always hold Trade deficits aren’t a consequence of the price of foreign goods relative to US goods – PPP assures that these prices are the same Instead, trade deficits are motivated by real interest rates – low interest rates will lower domestic saving and increase domestic spending. This creates a trade deficit. But with globally integrated capital markets, every country takes the world interest rate as a constant.

  28. Normally, we think of a country’s currency appreciating during an expansion while its trade deficit worsens. Trade deficits are determined in asset markets. Rising income tends to raise investment expenditures and lowers savings – the world interest rate remains unaffected, but the trade deficit worsens Meanwhile, in the domestic money market, an increase in income raises money demand and lowers prices A drop in the domestic price level causes the dollar to appreciate

  29. The Bottom Line… • If commodity prices are free to adjust, then commodity markets/money markets take center stage in currency price determination (PPP) • There is no correlation between trade deficits and currency prices • Volatility in currency markets is created by relative price changes (real exchange rate changes) or speculative behavior • These relative price changes are passed onto nominal exchange rates

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