Forex 1
Forex 1
Forex 1
E = Rs. appreciation
Rs. price foreign goods lower; FX price of Indian goods higher.
Indian Net Exports fall; foreign net exports increase
International Fisher Effect [ (S1 S2)/S2] x 100 = i$-i where i$ & i are the respective nominal interest rates in U.S & Japan S1 is the spot exchange rate at the beginning of the period S2 is the spot exchange rate at end of the period
Investor Psychology 1. Bandwagon Effects shift in the value of the currency[ short run exchange rate movements ] not due to shift in macroeconomic fundamentals but due to speculation
2. Short Selling the domestic currrency with a view of a better exchange rate which later became a self fulfilling prophecy due mass action by forex traders
Central Banks
non-commercial motives relatively small portion of trading volume may intervene to address perceived economic/financial imbalances
Hedge Funds
partnership of high net-worth individuals highly leveraged global investing add liquidity, flexibility, and sometimes instability to FX markets
Corporations
mostly act through intermediaries
Individuals
tourists ~ insignificant volume
Intermediaries Brokers
mostly service commercial banks and trading houses anonymous connected to many banks ~ shop for best price (exchange rate)
Direct Dealing
through dealing system ~ e.g., Reuters, Quotron quotes valid for 20 sec.
Physical Market
Daily Turnover in excess of$1.5 trillion
more than 50 times U.S. daily GDP; more than 30 times global goods and services trade
FX market activity far in excess of that necessary to purchase global output.
A currency that is widely used to denominate international contracts made by parties who do not reside in the country that issues the vehicle currency. more than half of all trades against Dollars lower transactions costs when trading indirectly against dollars, even if $ not actually needed. , also function as lesser vehicle currencies
Spreads
BID (buying) rate and ASK rate
e.g., monitor might show CAD 1.5223-28 (per Rs.). BID = 1.5223, ASK = 1.5228. Spread is 5 pips, where pip is last decimal.
Spread is a transaction cost Spread is larger for more thinly traded (lower liquidity) currencies
Demand for DM in NY, ENY Supply DM in Frankfurt, EFrank. : Exchange rates converge!
Forward Markets
Buying & Selling currency for future delivery ~ 30, 90, or 180 days Contract stipulates amount traded, the price, and value date
price = forward rate = F (Rs./unit foreign currency)
F may be quoted outright (actual quote), or by forward spread (from spot rate; used by dealing systems).
Swaps
Combine two transactions into one Foreign Exchange Swap: spot trade with opposing forward trade Currency Swap: firms borrow domestic currency, swap principal w/ foreign firm in net present value terms ~ cheaper foreign currency borrowing.
Futures
Similar to forward agreements except active secondary market standardized contracts ~ fewer currencies, standardized value and expiry date
Options
Underlying Asset = future or spot cash
Protects against unfavorable spot XR changes, while not limiting ability to exploit favorable spot XR changes
In the money ~ can profitably exercise option CALL in the money when currency appreciates; hedge accounts payable in foreign currencies PUT in the money when currency depreciates; hedge accounts receivable in foreign currencies
Example
Rs.5m account payable due 90d. E (spot) = .69Rs./CAD, F = .67Rs./CAD. Call option strike = .68Rs./CAD. Expect Rs. depreciation. Future spot = .72 exercise option, save .03/CAD or Rs.150,000 over previous spot, though F @ .67 was better. Future spot = .65 just buy spot; save .02/CAD over fwd