Exchange Rates and The Foreign Exchange Market: An Asset Approach
Exchange Rates and The Foreign Exchange Market: An Asset Approach
Exchange Rates and The Foreign Exchange Market: An Asset Approach
Exchange Rates
and the Foreign
Exchange
Market: An Asset
Approach
Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.
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The participants:
1. Commercial banks and other depository institutions:
transactions involve buying/selling of deposits in
different currencies for investment purposes.
2. Non-bank financial institutions (mutual funds, hedge
funds, securities firms, insurance companies, pension
funds) may buy/sell foreign assets for investment.
3. Non-financial businesses conduct foreign currency
transactions to buy/sell goods, services and assets.
4. Central banks: conduct official international
reserves transactions.
Source: Datastream. Rates shown are 90-day forward exchange rates and spot exchange rates, at end of month.
• We use the
demand of (rate of return on) dollar denominated deposits
and the demand of (rate of return on) foreign currency
denominated deposits
to construct a model of foreign exchange markets.
• This model is in equilibrium when deposits of all
currencies offer the same expected rate of return:
interest parity.
Interest parity implies that deposits in all currencies are equally
desirable assets.
Interest parity implies that arbitrage in the foreign exchange
market is not possible.
1.07
1.05
1.03
1.02
1.00
0.031 0.050 0.069 0.079 0.100
R$ Expected dollar return
on dollar deposits, R$
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 13-34
Fig. 13-4: Determination of the Equilibrium
Dollar/Euro Exchange Rate
No one is willing to
hold euro deposits
No one is willing to
hold dollar deposits
A depreciation
of the euro is
an appreciation
of the dollar.
Individuals and
institutions now
expect the euro to
appreciate