lectures 11 and 12: globalization of financial markets lecture 11: the post-war financial system...
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LECTURES 11 and 12:Globalization of Financial Markets
Lecture 11: The post-war financial system
• Measuring financial integration• Foreign exchange markets (more in Appendix)
• Liberalization & interest rate arbitrage
• Innovation in financial markets• Ways to manage risk: The forward exchange market• Securitization
Lecture 12: Financial globalization, continued
• Should countries open up to international capital flows?• Advantages of financial integration • Disadvantages of financial integration
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
I. Direct measures of barriers, e.g., IMF count of freedom from KA restrictions.
II. “Quantity tests”
III. “Price tests”Source: Kose, Prasad, Rogoff & Wei (2009)
Measuring International
Financial Integration
(1970-2004)
All show general trend toward financial integration.
Menzie Chinn & Hiro Ito, "A New Measure of Financial Openness" (Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis, 2008), updated July 2010
http://web.pdx.edu/~ito/Chinn-Ito_website.htm.
I. Direct Measure of Financial Barriers: Chinn-Ito tally of capital controls, from IMF data
Rapid financial liberalization in 1990s
II. Quantity measures
One comprehensive indicator of gross
financial transactions:the volume of turnover
in foreign exchange markets.
Trading volume rose rapidly in the 1990s.
Forward contracts (including swaps) became more than half of the total.
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
FX trading has continued to grow rapidly.
Graph 2
Most trading is among banks.
Only 9% is with non-financial customers.
{
FX transactions now exceed $5 trillion per day
Spot transactions < ½. More are forwards & related derivatives.
Graph 3
}
Quantity test shows rising integration
IMF
III. Price Measure: Test arbitrage by price of the same asset across borders
.
Robert McCauley, CFR conference on Internationalization of the RMB, Beijing, Nov.2011, Graph 5. Data Source: Bloomberg, BISNote: company composition of the two indices differs.
Premium of “A shares” (held domestically), over “H shares” (held in Hong Kong)
{ Higher prices on-shore
Chinese firms’ stock prices, onshore relative to offshore:
Price Measure:Covered interest arbitrage
German interest rates in Frankfurtin 1973 >> rates available in marks
offshore in London(whether measured in euromarks
or covered eurodollars).
Why? Stringent capital controls penalized foreign investors who
wanted to acquire German assets.
Germany removed capital controlsafter the need to defend the fixed ex-
change rate had been overtaken by events, => The interest differential
disappeared in 1974.
{
{
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
Similarly, Tokyo interest rates
were higher than those available in yen offshore (“euroyen”),
until 1979.
Why? Foreign investors
were banned from holding
Japanese assets.
{Japan removed
controls on outflows, 1979-83.
Again, arbitrage eliminated the
interest differential.
In 1978, Japan still prohibited foreigners from holding deposits in Tokyo => interest differential.
Liberalization in another country that had controls on capital inflows
Source: Frankel (1985), The Yen/Dollar Agreement ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
UK interest rates in 1977-78 were lower domestically than those available offshore.
{
{ Thatcher removed the controls in 1979.Interest differential fell to 0.
Liberalization in a country that had controls on outflows
Controls against capital outflow kept domestic investorsfrom taking money out.
France kept its controls on capital outflows until the late 1980s.
Again, they produced an offshore-onshore differential, which shot up whenever there was speculation of a franc devaluation.
Again, the differential disappeared after controls were removed.
{
Liberalization in a country
that had controls on outflows
From: M. Mussa and M. Goldstein, “The Integration of World Capital Markets,” Changing Capital Markets: Implications for Monetary Policy, Fed.Res.Bk. Kansas City, 1993.
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
COVERED INTEREST PARITY
=> $ (1 + iUS) = $ (1 + fd)(1 + iUK).
= $ (1 + fd + iUK + fd iUK ).Because (fd iUK) is small, iUS fd + iUK.
Forward discount: fd (F - S)/S
where S is the spot rate in $/£ and F is the forward rate.
If the U.S. nominal interest rate exceeds the U.K. rate, the $ sells at a discount in the forward exchange market.
+ iUS £(1/S)(1+iUK)
(F $/£)= $ 1
=> 1 + fd F/S
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel Source: Financial TimesAccessed 11//2/2007
Selling at a forward discountagainst the $:Turkish lireArgentine pesoBrazilian real
Selling at a forward premiumagainst the $:
YenNew Taiwan $UAE dirham
Spot rateDaily exchange rates
Forward:
Transaction cost
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
Securitization, internationally
1982 – International debt crisis: Banks lose enthusiasm for lending to developing countries.
1987 – Basel I Agreement sets standards for international banks (e.g., minimum capital requirements).1989 – Brady bonds securitize bad bank loans to developing countries.
1994 – Mexican peso crisis hits when foreign investors lose willingness to hold CETES & tesobonos.
1997 – Thai baht crisis also features a larger role for securities.
2007-08 – International securitization of US mortgages (“MBS”)ends in tears, with the sub-prime mortgage market crisis.
2011 – Basel III: AAA ratings for MBSs, ABSs or CDOs => 0 risk./
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
I. Direct measures of barriers(1970-2004), e.g., count of freedom
from KA restrictions, IMF.
II. “Quantity tests”
Source: Kose, Prasad, Rogoff & Wei (2009)
Measuring International Financial Integration for Developing Countries
Appendix 1:
For emerging markets, liberalization has been more rapid de facto than de jure: Capital controls are hard to enforce.
The forward premium + the country premium add up to the differential
{{{
between Brazilian interest rates and $ interest rates in London (LIBOR)
Price test: Sovereign spread on Brazilian debt
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
Appendix 2: Measures of activity in global foreign exchange markets.
The world’s largest financial center, as measured by FX, is London, not New York.
In 2010, UK banks accounted for 36.7% of forex turnover, followed by the US (18%), Japan (6%), Singapore (5%), Switzerland (5%), Hong Kong SAR (5%) & Australia (4%).
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
ITF220 Prof.J.FrankelSource: BIS, Triennial Central Bank Survey: Report on global foreign exchange market activity in 2010 (Basel, Dec.2010).
The dollar remains the leading vehicle currency, used in 85% of transactions.
Global fx market turnover was 20% higher in 2010 than in 2007, with average daily turnover of $4.0 trillion compared to $3.3 trillion.
Daily turnover in OTC interest rate derivatives grew by 24%, to $2.1 trillion in 2010.
The rise was driven by the 48% growth in turnover of spot transactions, (=37% of fx turnover; spot turnover rose to $1.5 tr. in 2010 from $1.0 tr. in 2007.)
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
2004
Daily exchange rates:
Source: Financial Times, Oct.23, 2001
Emergingmarkets/developingcountries
spot(i.e.,immediate delivery)
ITF220 Prof.J.Frankel
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