ch04 Multinational Financial

42
1 Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro 7 th Edition J.Wiley & Sons Power Points by Joseph F. Greco, Ph.D. California State University, Fullerton

description

Chapter 4 Parity Condition

Transcript of ch04 Multinational Financial

Page 1: ch04 Multinational Financial

1

Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro

7th Edition J.Wiley & SonsPower Points byJoseph F. Greco, Ph.D.California State University, Fullerton

Page 2: ch04 Multinational Financial

2

CHAPTER 4

PARITY CONDITIONS AND CURRENCY FORECASTING

Page 3: ch04 Multinational Financial

3

CHAPTER OVERVIEW

I. ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OFONE PRICE

II. PURCHASING POWER PARITYIII. THE FISHER EFFECTIV. THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECTV. INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORYVI. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN

THE FORWARD AND FUTURE SPOT RATE

VII. CURRENCY FORECASTING

Page 4: ch04 Multinational Financial

4

PART I. ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE

I. THE LAW OF ONE PRICEA. Law states:

Identical goods sell for the same price worldwide.

Page 5: ch04 Multinational Financial

5

ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE

B. Theoretical basis:

If the price after exchange-rate

adjustment were not equal,

arbitrage in the goods

worldwide ensures eventually it will.

Page 6: ch04 Multinational Financial

6

ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE

C. Five Parity Conditions Result From These Arbitrage Activities

1. Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)2. The Fisher Effect (FE)3. The International Fisher Effect(IFE)4. Interest Rate Parity (IRP)5. Unbiased Forward Rate (UFR)

Page 7: ch04 Multinational Financial

7

ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE

D. Five Parity Conditions Linked by

1. The adjustment of various

rates and prices to inflation.

Page 8: ch04 Multinational Financial

8

ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE

2. The notion that money should have no effect

on real variables (since they have been adjusted for price changes).

Page 9: ch04 Multinational Financial

9

ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE

E. Inflation and home currency depreciation:

1. jointly determined by the growth of domestic

money supply;2. Relative to the growth of

domestic money demand.

Page 10: ch04 Multinational Financial

10

ARBITRAGE AND THE LAW OF ONE PRICE

F. THE LAW OF ONE PRICE- enforced by

international arbitrage.

Page 11: ch04 Multinational Financial

11

PART II. PURCHASING POWER PARITY

I. THE THEORY OF PURCHASINGPOWER PARITY: states that spot exchange rates between currencies will change to the differential in inflation rates between countries.

Page 12: ch04 Multinational Financial

12

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

II. ABSOLUTE PURCHASING POWER PARITY

A. Price levels adjusted for

exchange rates should be

equal between countries

Page 13: ch04 Multinational Financial

13

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

II. ABSOLUTE PURCHASING POWER PARITY

B. One unit of currency has

same purchasing

power globally.

Page 14: ch04 Multinational Financial

14

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

III. RELATIVE PURCHASING POWER PARITY

A. states that the exchange rate of one currency

against another will adjust to reflect changes in the price levels of the two countries.

Page 15: ch04 Multinational Financial

15

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

1. In mathematical terms:

where et = future spot rate

e0 = spot rate

ih = home inflation

if = foreign inflation t = the time period

tf

tht

i

i

e

e

1

1

0

Page 16: ch04 Multinational Financial

16

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

2. If purchasing power parity is expected to hold, then the

bestprediction for the one-periodspot rate should be

tf

th

ti

iee

1

10

Page 17: ch04 Multinational Financial

17

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

3. A more simplified but less precise relationship is

that is, the percentage change should be approximately equal to the inflation rate differential.

fht ii

e

e

0

Page 18: ch04 Multinational Financial

18

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

4. PPP says

the currency with the higher inflation rate is

expected to depreciate relative to the currency with the lower rate of inflation.

Page 19: ch04 Multinational Financial

19

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

B. Real Exchange Rates:the quoted or nominal rate

adjusted for a country’s inflation rate is

th

tf

tt i

iee

)1(

)1('

Page 20: ch04 Multinational Financial

20

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

C. Real exchange rates1. If exchange rates adjust to

inflation differential, PPP states that real exchange rates stay the same.

Page 21: ch04 Multinational Financial

21

PURCHASING POWER PARITY

C. Real exchange rates

2. Competitive positions:

domestic and foreign firms

are unaffected.

Page 22: ch04 Multinational Financial

22

PART III.THE FISHER EFFECT (FE)

I. THE FISHER EFFECTstates that nominal interest rates (r) are a function of the real interest rate (a) and a premium (i) for inflation expectations.

R = a + i

Page 23: ch04 Multinational Financial

23

THE FISHER EFFECT

B. Real Rates of Interest1. Should tend toward equality

everywhere through arbitrage.2. With no government

interference nominal rates vary by inflation differential or

rh - rf = ih - if

Page 24: ch04 Multinational Financial

24

THE FISHER EFFECT

C. According to the Fisher Effect,

countries with higher inflation rates have higher interest rates.

Page 25: ch04 Multinational Financial

25

THE FISHER EFFECT

D. Due to capital market

integration globally,

interest rate

differentials are eroding.

Page 26: ch04 Multinational Financial

26

PART IV. THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT (IFE)

I. IFE STATES:A. the spot rate adjusts to the

interest rate differential between two

countries.

Page 27: ch04 Multinational Financial

27

THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT

IFE = PPP + FE

tf

tht

r

r

e

e

)1(

)1(

0

Page 28: ch04 Multinational Financial

28

THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT

B. Fisher postulated1. The nominal interest rate

differential should reflect the inflation rate differential.

Page 29: ch04 Multinational Financial

29

THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT

B. Fisher postulated

2. Expected rates of return are equal in the absence of government intervention.

Page 30: ch04 Multinational Financial

30

THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT

C. Simplified IFE equation:

(if rf is relatively small)

1 0

0h f

e er r

e

Page 31: ch04 Multinational Financial

31

THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT

D. Implications of IFE1. Currency with the

lower interest rate expected to appreciate relative to one

with a higher rate.

Page 32: ch04 Multinational Financial

32

THE INTERNATIONAL FISHER EFFECT

D. Implications of IFE

2. Financial market arbitrage:

insures interest rate differential is an unbiased predictor of change in future spot rate.

Page 33: ch04 Multinational Financial

33

PART VI. INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY

I. INTRODUCTIONA. The Theory states:

the forward rate (F) differs from the spot rate (S) at

equilibrium by an amount equal to the interest

differential (rh - rf) between two countries.

Page 34: ch04 Multinational Financial

34

INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY2. The forward premium or

discount equals the interestrate differential.

(F - S)/S = (rh - rf)

where rh = the home rate

rf = the foreign rate

Page 35: ch04 Multinational Financial

35

INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY3. In equilibrium, returns on

currencies will be the samei. e. No profit will be realizedand interest parity existswhich can be written

(1 + rh) = F

(1 + rf) S

Page 36: ch04 Multinational Financial

36

INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORYB. Covered Interest Arbitrage

1. Conditions required:

interest rate differential does

not equal the forward premium or discount.

2. Funds will move to a country

with a more attractive rate.

Page 37: ch04 Multinational Financial

37

INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORY3. Market pressures develop:

a. As one currency is more demanded spot and sold forward.

b. Inflow of fund depresses interest rates.

c. Parity eventually reached.

Page 38: ch04 Multinational Financial

38

INTEREST RATE PARITY THEORYC. Summary:

Interest Rate Parity states:

1. Higher interest rates on a

currency offset by forward discounts.

2. Lower interest rates are offset by forward

premiums.

Page 39: ch04 Multinational Financial

39

PART VI. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE

FORWARD AND THE FUTURE SPOT RATE

I. THE UNBIASED FORWARD RATEA. States that if the forward rate is unbiased, then it should reflect the expected future spot rate.B. Stated as

ft = et

Page 40: ch04 Multinational Financial

40

PART VI. CURRENCYFORECASTING

I. FORECASTING MODELSA. Created to forecast exchange rates in addition to parity conditions.B. Two types of forecast:

1. Market-based 2. Model-based

Page 41: ch04 Multinational Financial

41

CURRENCY FORECASTING

MARKET-BASED FORECASTS:

derived from market indicators.

A. The current forward rate contains implicit information about exchange rate changes for one year.

B. Interest rate differentials may be used to predict exchange rates beyond one year.

Page 42: ch04 Multinational Financial

42

CURRENCY FORECASTINGMODEL-BASED FORECASTS:

include fundamental and technical analysis.A. Fundamental relies on key

macroeconomic variables and policies which most like affect exchange rates.B. Technical relies on use of

1. Historical volume and price data2. Charting and trend analysis