IBE303 Lecture 7
Transcript of IBE303 Lecture 7
Lecture 7August 23th2010
Balance of Payment
Balance-of-Payments•Balance of payments accounts are a way
of keeping track of all economic transactions between the home country and the rest of the world over a specific time period (usually one year).
Recent Growth of Trade and Capital Movements•The value of trade in goods and services
has increased from $582 billion in 1973 to $15.8 trillion in 2008.
• International transactions of the monetary sort have also grown very rapidly over the last few decades.
Credit and Debits in Balance-of-Payments Accounting
•Credit items reflect transactions that give rise to payments flowing into the home country.▫e.g., exports, foreign investment inflows,
interest payments on earlier investments•Debit items reflect transactions that give
rise to payments flowing out of the home country.▫e.g., imports, foreign investment outflows,
interest payments to foreigners
Credit and Debits in Balance-of-Payments Accounting
•The IMF groups items into four categories▫Category I: Current account,▫Category II: Direct investment and other long-
term financial flows,▫Category III: Short-term nonofficial financial
flows, and▫Category IV: Changes in reserve assets of
official monetary authorities (central banks).
Credit and Debits in Balance-of-Payments Accounting
•Category I: Current account▫Credit items include exports of goods and
services, interest and dividends from investments abroad, wages earned abroad, and gifts from abroad.
▫Debit items include imports of goods and services, interest and dividends paid to investors abroad, wages paid to foreigners, and gifts sent abroad.
Credit and Debits in Balance-of-Payments Accounting
•Category II: Direct investment and other long-term financial flows▫Credit entries: anything that causes a net
increase in the holdings of assets in the home country by the foreign country.
▫Debit entries: anything that causes a net increase in the holdings of assets in a foreign country by the home country.
Credit and Debits in Balance-of-Payments Accounting
•Category III: Short-term nonofficial financial flows▫These are mainly private flows, with
maturities under one year.▫Credit items: any increase in foreign holdings
of such assets in the home country.▫Debit items: any increase in home country
holdings of such assets in the foreign country.
Credit and Debits in Balance-of-Payments Accounting
•Category IV: Changes in reserve assets of official monetary authorities (central banks)▫Credit items: whenever the foreign country
central bank acquires home country assets (such as bank accounts).
▫Debit items: whenever the home country central bank acquires foreign country assets.
Sample Entries in the Balance-of-Payments Accounts
• In general, balance-of-payments accounting relies on double-entry bookkeeping.
•This means that any transaction must be added as a credit and a debit.
•This implies that the sum of all credits must equal the sum of all debits, and the total BOP is always in balance.
Example
Sample Entries in the Balance-of-Payments Accounts
#1: Exporters in the U.S. send $6,000 of goods to Canada, receiving a short-term bank deposit of $6,000 from Canada.▫Credit: Category I: Export of goods +
$6,000▫Debit: Category III: Increase in short-term
private assets abroad -$6,000
Sample Entries in the Balance-of-Payments Accounts
#2: Consumers in the U.S. buy $10,000 of goods from Canada, paying with a short-term bank deposit of $10,000.▫Debit: Category I: Imports of goods -
$10,000▫Credit: Category III: Increase in foreign
short-term assets in the U.S. +$10,000
Sample Entries in the Balance-of-Payments Accounts
#3: U.S. residents send $5,000 to Mexico as gifts.▫Credit: Category I: Exports of +$5,000▫Debit: Category I: unilateral transfer of -
$5,000
Sample Entries in the Balance-of-Payments Accounts
#4: An American firm provides $2,000 of shipping services to a Canadian company, which pays by transferring money into its U.S. account.▫Credit: Category I: export of services +
$2,000▫Debit: Category III: Decrease in short-term
private assets in the U.S.: -$2,000
Sample Entries in the Balance-of-Payments Accounts
#5: A Canadian company sends $8,000 in dividends to bank accounts of American stockholders.▫Credit: Category I: investment receipts
from abroad +$8,000▫Debit: Category III: Decrease in short-term
private assets in the U.S.: -$8,000
Sample Entries in the Balance-of-Payments Accounts
#6: An American buys a long-term bond from a Mexican company for $2,000; transfers payment from her U.S. bank account.▫Debit: Category II: increase in long-term
asset abroad -$2,000▫Credit: Category III: Increase in short-term
private assets in the U.S.: +$2,000
Sample Entries in the Balance-of-Payments Accounts
#7: Canadian banks wish to reduce holdings of dollars in U.S. banks by selling $800 to the Federal Reserve.▫Debit: Category III: Decrease in short-term
private assets in the U.S.: -$800▫Credit: Category IV: Increase in foreign
short-term official assets in the U.S.: +$800
Assembling a BOP Summary Statement
Debits Credits
#1 Increase in short-term private assets abroad
-$6,000 Exports of goods +$6,000
#2 Imports of goods -$10,000 Increase in foreign short-term private assets in US
+$10,000
#3 Unilateral transfers -$5,000 Exports of goods +$5,000
#4 Decrease in foreign short-term assets in U.S
-$2,000 Exports of services +$2,000
#5 Decrease in foreign short-term assets in U.S
-$8,000 Investment income from abroad
+$8,000
#6 Increase in long-term assets abroad
-$2,000 Increase in foreign short-term private assets in US
+$2,000
#7 Decrease in short-term private assets in the U.S.:
-$800 Increase in foreign short-term official assets
+$800
-$33,800 +$33,800
BOP SummaryCategory
I Exports of Goods +$11,000
Imports of goods -$10,000
Merchandise trade balance +$1,000
Exports of services +$2,000
Imports of services -$0
Balance of goods and services +$3,000
Factor income receipts from abroad +$8,000
Factor income payments abroad $0
Balance on goods, services, and investment income
+$11,000
Unilateral transfers received +$0
Unilateral transfers made -$5,000
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE +$6,000
BOP Summary (cont’d)
Category
II Net increase in foreign long-term assets in U.S.
+$0
Net increase in long-term assets abroad -$2,000
BASIC BALANCE +$4,000
III Net increase in foreign short-term private assets in U.S.
+$1,200
Net increase in short-term private assets abroad
-$6,000
OFFICIAL RESERVE TRANSACTIONS BALANCE
-$800
IV Net increase in foreign short-term official assets in U.S.
+$800
Net increase in official assets abroad -$0
TOTAL $0
Statistical Discrepancy•The current account balance may not
exactly equal the financial account balance due to incomplete or imperfect data, illegal activities, and mismatches on the timing of data collection.
•To account for these, a category called “statistical discrepancy” is included in the BOP.
U.S. International Transactions, 2007 (billions of $)
Exports of Goods +$1,148.5
Imports of goods -$1,967.9
Merchandise trade balance -$819.4
Exports of services +$497.2
Imports of services -$378.1
Balance of goods and services -700.3
Factor income receipts from abroad +$817.8
Factor income payments abroad -$736.0
Balance on goods, services, and investment income
-$618.5
Unilateral transfers, net -112.7
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE -$731.2
U.S. International Transactions, 2007 (billions of $)
Capital account, net -$1.8
U.S. official reserve assets, net +$0.1
U.S. government assets abroad (other than reserves), net
+$22.3
U.S. private assets abroad, net -$1,267.5
Foreign official assets in the U.S., net +$411.1
Other foreign assets in U.S., net (incl. financial derivatives)
+$1,653.1
Statistical discrepancy +$41.3
International Investment Position of the U.S.•The BOP accounts are flow concepts– they
represent changes over a time period.•The international investment position is a stock concept – it involves totals up to the present.
• If foreign assets outweigh foreign liabilities, a country is a net creditor; otherwise it is a net debtor.
Int’l Investment Position of the U.S. (end of 2007) – billions of $
A. U.S.-owned assets abroad
U.S. official reserve assets $277.2
U.S. gov’t assets (not reserve assets) 94.5
Financial derivatives 2,284.6
U.S. private assets abroad 14,983.7
direct investment abroad $3,332.8
foreign bonds 1,478.1
foreign corporate stocks 5,170.6
U.S. claims on foreigners by U.S. banks and nonbanks not reported elsewhere
5,002.2
TOTAL U.S. ASSETS ABROAD $17,640.0
Int’l Investment Position of the U.S. (end of 2007) – billions of $
B. foreign-owned assets in the U.S.
Foreign official assets in the U.S. $3,337.0
Financial derivatives 2,201.1
Other foreign assets in the U.S. 14,543.7
foreign direct investment $2,422.8
U.S. Treasury securities 272.0
Corporate and other bonds 3,299.3
Corporate stocks 2,833.1
U.S. liabilities to foreigners not reported elsewhere
4,981.7
TOTAL FOREIGN ASSETS IN THE U.S. $20,081.8
Net international investment position of the U.S.
-$2,441.8
International Investment Position of the U.S.
•The U.S. is a net international debtor.•No other country in the world is as
indebted.•Disadvantages
▫We must transfer future goods and income abroad.
▫Foreign ownership may threaten U.S. sovereignty.
•Still, productive investments should allow repayment.
Foreign Exchange
The Foreign Exchange Rate and the Market for Foreign Exchange•Foreign exchange rate: the price of one
currency in terms of another.▫e.g., US$/€ or €/US$
•The foreign exchange rate is determined by the interaction of demand for and supply of foreign exchange.
•The foreign exchange market is the worldwide network of markets and institutions that exchange currencies.
The Market for Foreign Exchange: Demand•Foreign exchange is demanded by those
▫wishing to buy goods and services from or send gifts or payments to another country.
▫wishing to purchase financial assets in another country.
▫wishing to profit from exchange rate changes (speculation).
▫wishing to minimize risk from exchange rate changes (hedging).
The Market for Foreign Exchange: Supply•Foreign exchange is supplied by those
▫selling goods and services to or receiving gifts or payments from another country.
▫in other countries who wish to purchase financial assets in the home country.
▫wishing to profit from exchange rate changes (speculation).
▫wishing to minimize risk from exchange rate changes (hedging).
The Market for Foreign Exchange
D€
Euros (€)
$/€ S€
Qeq
eeq
Initially, Qeq euros are traded, and the equilibrium price is eeq.
The Market for Foreign Exchange
D€
Euros (€)
$/€ S€
Qeq
eeq
An increase in U.S. demand for euros causes an appreciation of the euro.
D'€
e'eq
Q'eq
The Market for Foreign Exchange
D€
Euros (€)
$/€ S€
Qeq
eeq
An increase in the supply of euros causes a depreciation of the euro.
S'€
e'eq
Q'eq
The Market for Foreign Exchange: Supply•The total supply and demand for foreign
exchange includes two components.▫One is related to current account
transaction.▫The other is related to financial flows,
including speculation and hedging.
The Market for Foreign Exchange
DG&S
Euros (€)
$/€SG&S
The total equilibrium exchange rate will only be the same as the one for Good & Service (G&S) if the current account is exactly in balance.DTotal
eeq
Qeq
STotal
The Spot Market•The spot market is the daily or current
market for foreign exchange.•The main participants are large
commercial banks trading with each other in the interbank market.
•There are many foreign exchange markets, but they all tend to generate the same exchange rate regardless of location.▫This is the result of arbitrage.
Arbitrage•Arbitrage occurs when individuals see an
opportunity to buy something at a low price in one market, then sell it for a higher price in a second market.
•This causes prices in all markets to move towards each other.
•Arbitrage causes currency prices to be similar across markets, and makes cross rates between currencies consistent.
Different Measures of the Spot Rate•How can we measure a country’s overall
exchange rate (not just a bilateral rate)?▫Nominal effective exchange rate (NEER)▫Real exchange rate (RER)▫Real effective exchange rate (REER)▫Purchasing power parity (absolute and
relative)
Different Measures of the Spot Rate: NEER•The NEER is an index that measures the
change over time in the nominal value of a country’s currency.
•The nominal effective exchange rate weights the exchange rates of each of a country’s trading partners by the volume of trade with each.
•NEER is a weighted average of a currency’s exchange rate against a bundle of other currencies.
Different Measures of the Spot Rate: NEER•However, prices in the two countries may
not be constant.•Suppose the dollar appreciates against
the euro by 10%, but at the same time U.S. prices rose by more than European prices.▫The decline in U.S. competitiveness is more
than 10%.•RER=e€/$(price indexUS/price indexEur).
Different Measures of the Spot Rate: NEER•The REER is an index that measures the
change over time in the real value of a country’s currency.
•The real effective exchange rate weights the real exchange rates of each of a country’s trading partners by the volume of trade with each.
•REER is a weighted average of a currency’s real exchange rate against a bundle of other currencies.
Absolute Purchasing Power Parity
•In principle, a commodity should have the same price worldwide when measured in a common currency, due to arbitrage.
•PPPabs = price levelUS/price levelEur
•If cotton costs $0.5 per pound in the U.S., and €0.35 per pound in Europe, the exchange rate should be $1.43/€.
•However, transportation costs and other differences means absolute PPP doesn’t generally occur.
Relative Purchasing Power Parity
•Relative PPP takes into account differences in price indexes
•PPPrel$/€ = (e $/€) (PIUS/PIEur).
•Relative PPP relates the change in the exchange rate to changes in the two countries’ price levels.
The Forward Market•Most exchanges of currencies takes place
two business days after the contract has been completed.
•In general, forward exchange rates can be for any period of time into the future.
•Suppose a U.S. company agrees to buy 5 trucks from a French company at a price of €50,000 each, with delivery in 6 months, the equivalent of $70,000 at today’s spot exchange rate of $1.4/€.
The Forward Market•What if the euro appreciates to $1.6/€?
▫Now the price in dollars has risen to $80,000.
•There are ways to hedge against this potential risk.▫The buyer and seller can agree to make the
sale at today’s forward exchange rate.▫The buyer can purchase a foreign currency
option This gives the buyer the right to a specific
exchange rate at a specific time in the future.
Foreign Exchange and Financial Market
The Link Between the Foreign Exchange and the Financial Markets•The decision to invest internationally
depends on the expected rate of return on the international asset relative to domestic alternatives.
•Specifically, investors consider▫The domestic interest rate or expected rate
of return.▫The foreign interest rate or expected rate
of return.▫Any expected changes in exchange rates.
The Link Between the Foreign Exchange and the Financial Markets•An investor would be indifferent between
a $1 domestic or foreign investment if her expected return is the same after accounting for expected changes in the spot rate.
•Let iNY = 90-day interest rate in New York.•Let iParis = 90-day interest rate in Paris.•Let E(e) = the expected spot rate in 90
days.
The Link Between the Foreign Exchange and the Financial Markets• An investor would be indifferent if
$1(1+iNY) =[($1)/(e)]x(1+iParis)[E(e)]
or
(1+iNY)/(1+iParis)=E(e)/e
• This can be approximated as
(iNY – iParis) ≈ xa
where ▫xa is the expected appreciation of the foreign currency.
The Link Between the Foreign Exchange and the Financial Markets•This is called uncovered interest parity
(UIP).
•If (iNY – iParis) > xa, investments in the U.S. will be more attractive to investors and investment funds would flow into the U.S.
•If (iNY – iParis) < xa, investments in France will be more attractive to investors and investment funds would flow into France.
The Link Between the Foreign Exchange and the Financial Markets•Naturally, individuals don’t have perfect
foresight.
•Since expectations can be wrong, there may be an additional premium required to undertake the risk:
(iNY – iParis) ≈ xa – RP
•If the risk premium is 1%, the gap between the interest rates must be higher for investors to be indifferent.
The Link Between the Foreign Exchange and the Financial Markets•So far, we’ve assumed any exchange rate
risk is borne by the investor.•In fact, the risk can be hedged in the
forward market.•The relationship between the spot and
forward rates is usually stated as p = [efwd/e] – 1
where ▫efwd is the forward exchange rate▫p is the premium (or discount).
The Link Between the Foreign Exchange and the Financial Markets•If the forward market exchange rate is
$1.72/€ and the spot market rate is $1.70/€,
•p = [1.72/1.70] – 1 = 1.2%.
•That is, there is a 1.2% premium on the foreign currency.
The Link Between the Foreign Exchange and the Financial Markets•An investor would be approximately
indifferent if(iNY – iParis) ≈ p
where ▫p is the percentage premium.
•We can also include transactions costs:
(iNY – iParis) ≈ p ± transactions costs
•This is called covered interest parity (CIP).
Simultaneous Adjustments of the Foreign Exchange and Financial Mkts•What happens if
(iNY – iParis) > p ± transactions costs?
•Investment funds should move from Paris to New York, decreasing the supply of loan-able funds in Paris.
•This should put upward pressure on interest rates in Paris.
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments
iParis
€
S€
D€
iP
S'€
i'PParis money market
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments•The conversion of euros into dollars in the
spot market increases the supply of euros, thereby putting downward pressure on the euro spot rate (that is, causing the dollar to appreciate).
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments
e$/€
€
S€
D€
e'
S'€
e0 Spot market
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments•Investors wish to cover themselves
against exchange rate changes will now purchase euros in the forward market.
•This will put upward pressure on the euro forward rate.
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments
e$/€fwd
€
St€
Dt€
efwd'
Dt'€
efwd
Forward market
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments•When the new funds move to New York,
supply of loanable funds increases there.•This will put downward pressure on iNY.
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments
iNY
$
S$
D$
iNY'
S‘$
iNY N.Y. money market
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments•All of these adjustments work toward
reducing the initial inequality.•Eventually,
(iNY – iParis) = p ± transactions costs.
International Bank Lending•Banks’ balance sheets commonly have
loans and deposits that are international in origin.
•As of 2008, gross international bank lending was $37.5 trillion!
International Bank Lending•Gross international bank lending can be
divided into three components:▫domestic bank loans in domestic currency to
foreigners, ▫domestic bank loans in foreign currency to
foreigners, and▫domestic bank loans in foreign currency to
domestic residents.•The first is called “traditional foreign
bank lending.”•The second and third represent the
eurocurrency market.
The Eurodollar Market•Eurodollar deposits arise when a U.S.
exporter wishes to sell goods to a foreigner, is paid in dollars, and wishes to leave the dollars in an account in a foreign bank.
•The Eurodollar market began to be important in the 1950s, as the USSR chose to put dollar-denominated deposits in British (rather than American) banks.
•Other factors, such as the oil shocks in the 1970s, increased Eurodollar holdings.
The Significance of Eurodollar Markets•The rise of Eurodollar markets has
significantly increased the international mobility of financial capital.
•This means that interest rates have been increasingly linked across countries, and have moved toward each other.
•One drawback is that financial problems quickly spread worldwide, such as happened in 2008.
The International Bond Market (Debt Securities)•Government and corporations can borrow
money by issuing bonds.•Bonds have a face value – this is the
amount that will be paid to the lender when the bond matures.
•Foreign bond markets and eurobond markets together comprise the international bond market.
•The stock of this sort of debt was $23.9 trillion as of 2008.
Significance of the International Bond Market•As with the Eurodollar markets, the
increasing importance of international bond markets has increased the international mobility of financial capital, and countries’ interest rates have moved toward each other.
•This increased interdependence also helps spread financial problems.
International Stock Markets•Ownership in companies (common stock)
is another asset that is traded internationally.
•Exact figures on the volume of international stock transactions are difficult to obtain, but most believe these have increased.
•This may create a tendency for movements of stock prices across countries to become more similar to each other.
Significance of the Rise of International Stock Markets•The increasing importance of
international stock markets has facilitated the flow of financial capital to its most productive use.
•This increased interdependence can also allow financial problems to spread quickly, as was demonstrated in 2008.
Basic International Financial Linkages: Review•Investors will be indifferent between
domestic and foreign investment when
(ihome – iforeign) ≈ p = xa – RP, where
p is the forward exchange rate premium.
Basic International Financial Linkages: An Example•How does the Eurodollar market change
our understanding of financial linkages?•Suppose
Lending iNY 7% Lending iLondon 8%
Lending iEuro$ London 6.5% Lending iEurosterling NY 7.5%
Deposit iNY 5% Deposit iLondon 6%
Deposit iEuro$ London 5.5% Deposit iEurosterling NY 6.5%
Spot e$/£ 1.691 3-months forward e$/£ 1.687
Basic International Financial Linkages
• If covered interest arbitrage parity holds, after dividing the annual interest rate difference by 4 to approximate a 3-month rate we get
(ihome – iforeign) ≈ p
(0.07 -0.08)/4 ≈ (1.687 – 1.691)/1.691
-0.0025 ≈ -0.0025.
Basic International Financial Linkages
•What happens if the Federal Reserve raises U.S. interest rates by ½ of a percentage point? ▫Now, the eurodollar deposit rate will rise to
6% and the eurodollar lending rate will rise to 7%.
•We’d also expect the forward rate to rise (the dollar depreciates) and the spot rate to fall (the dollar appreciates)
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments
i
$
S$
D€
i
S'$
i' NY money market
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments•The higher interest rate in New York
increases demand for eurodollars.•This will put upward pressure on the
eurodollar rate.
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments
i
$
S$
D$
i'
D‘$
i0
London money market (eurodollars)
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments•The higher U.S. interest rate leads to an
increased supply of pounds on the spot market▫This additional supply is hedged in the
forward market.
e$/£
£
S£
D£
Spot market
S'£
e$/£
e'$/£
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments
e$/£
€
St€
D£
e'$/£
D'£
Forward markete$/£
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments
International Financial and Exchange Rate Adjustments•Further adjustments might occur in the
U.K.’s money market and the eurosterling market that would lead to higher interest rates there, but the Bank of England may intervene to prevent this.
Hedging Eurodollar Interest Rate Risk
•New instruments, called derivatives, have emerged to hedge interest rate risk.
•Derivatives are financial contracts whose value is derived from an underlying asset such as stocks, bonds, commodities, etc.
Commonly Used Derivatives•Maturity mismatching•Future rate agreements•Eurodollar interest rate swaps•Eurodollar cross-currency interest rate
swaps•Eurodollar interest rate futures•Eurodollar interest rate options•Options on swaps•Equity financial derivatives
The Current Global Derivatives Market
•Futures have been traded on metals and agricultural commodities for more than a century, so the idea of derivatives isn’t new.
•However, in the past 25 years there has been an explosion in the use of global derivatives.
•Annual growth rates have been in the range of 20%-30%.
Values of Selected Global Derivatives, 1987-2008
(in billions of dollars) 1987 2008
A. Exchange-traded instruments
$730 $59,797
Interest rate futures 488 19,271
Interest rate options 123 35,161
Currency futures 15 102
Currency options 60 126
Stock mkt index futures
18 729
Stock mkt index options
28 4,409
B. Over-the-counter instruments
866 683,725
Interest rate swaps 683 356,772
Currency swaps 183 16,307
Interest rate swaps 0 62,162
The Current Global Derivatives Market
•Why have derivatives become so important?
•Participants in the international financial markets have discovered that derivatives can▫ increase their returns and/or▫ lower their risk.
•Derivatives allow for an unbundling of exposure to foreign exchange risk, interest rate risk, and price risk.
The Current Global Derivatives Market
•However, as the global financial crisis of 2007-08 has shown, derivatives cannot eliminate risk.