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1. Anne Sibert Lecture 2: The Foreign Exchange Market
3. From a 1998 publication by the NY Fed: Individual trades of $200 – 500 million are not uncommon.
Quoted prices change as often as 20 times a minute.
It is estimated that the world’s most active exchange rates can change 18,000 times a day.
4. Global Foreign Exchange Market Turnoverin the Traditional Foreign Exchange Market Daily averages in April in billions of US dollars at April 2007 exchange rates
6. Reasons for the Changes The fall in 2001 was due to: the introduction of the euro, consolidation in the banking sector, mergers in the corporate sector.
The recent rise is more difficult to explain in terms of fundamentals.
7. It is a 24-hour market The business day opens in Wellington, New Zealand, followed by Sydney, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore.
A few hours later, trading begins in Bahrain.
Late in the Tokyo day, markets open in Europe.
In the early afternoon in Europe, markets open in the United States.
In the mid to late afternoon in New York, markets open in the Asia-Pacific area.
Most of the activity takes place when European markets are open.
8. Geographic Distribution of Turnover(in percent)
9. London is the largest market London’s size as a financial centre is partially due to its historical importance and it relative lack of regulation.
London benefits from its proximity to major Eurocurrency markets.
London benefits from its time zone: London’s morning overlaps with late trading in the Far East and London’s afternoon overlaps with New York.
Most of the trading in London is done by foreign-owned institutions.
10. Foreign Exchange Dealers The market is made up of 2000 foreign exchange dealers. These are mostly commercial banks and investment banks. They trade with customers and with each other.
They are linked through telephones, computers and other electronic means.
There are about 100 – 200 market-making banks that account for the bulk of the trading.
The dealers don’t trade physical currency; they trade bank accounts denominated in different currencies.
11. Market Makers A market maker for a currency is a dealer who regularly quotes the rates at which he is willing to buy and to sell that currency.
During normal hours, he creates a two-sided market for its customers. He is willing (within reason) to both buy and sell at the rates he quotes.
He makes a profit from the spread; that is the difference between the selling and buying rates.
12. By Type of Reporting Bank’s Counterparty(percent)
13. Central Banks Central Banks intervene in the foreign exchange market to influence the value of their currency.
Many central banks serve as the primary banker for their government and for other public enterprises.
Some central banks (for example, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York) act as agent for other central banks.
Some central banks actively manage their foreign exchange reserves.
14. Currency Distribution of Forex Turnover
15. The dollar is the most important currency Many central banks hold the bulk of their reserves in the form of dollars; many central banks conduct much of their intervention in dollars; many international transactions are done using dollars; many contracts are invoiced in dollars.
The dollar is the major “vehicle” currency: if a dealer wants to trade Swiss francs for Mexican pesos, he will probably trade the francs for dollars and the dollars for pesos.
16. Types of Transactions Daily averages in April in billions of US dollars
17. Maturity of Contracts: 2007
18. Number of Banks Accounting for 75 Percent of the Turnover
19. Def. An exchange rate is the price of one currency in terms of another. A complication is that there are two ways to express any exchange rate.
Direct quote: the number of units of home currency necessary to buy one unit of foreign currency - the home currency price of foreign currency
Indirect quote: the number of units of foreign currency necessary to buy one unit of home currency - the foreign currency price of home currency
In terms of the dollar we have
American terms: dollars per other currency unit
European terms: other currency units per dollar
21. Triangular Arbitrage Opportunities for triangular arbitrage arise when direct quotations (exchange rates in terms of the dollar - this is another sense of this word) and cross-rate quotations (two other currencies against each other) allow for profit making.
This entails using one currency to buy a second, a second currency to buy a third, and a third currency to buy the first.
22. Example of Triangular Arbitrage Suppose the pound is quoted at 2.0000 dollars per pound.
Suppose that the euro is quoted at 1.3000 euros per dollar
Suppose that the pound is quoted at 2.5000 euros per pound
Trade 1 dollar for 1.3 euros. Trade 1.3 euros for 1.3/2.5 = .52 pounds. Trade for more than 1 dollar and make a profit.
23. To find what the cross rate must be: Suppose the pound is quoted at 2.0000 dollars per pound.
Suppose that the euro is quoted at 1.3000 euros per dollar
Then, euros / pound = (euros /dollar) / (pounds/dollar) = 1.3000/.5000 = 2.6000
24. Another example: The Bhutan ngultrum is trading at 39.3020 Ngultrums per dollar.
The Mauritania ouguiya is trading at 251.620.
The cross rate is ngultrums / ouguiya = (ngultrums /$) / (ouguiya /$) = 39.3020/ 251.620 = .156196.
25. Learn how to compute cross rates Suppose you are given exchange rates for currencies A and B in terms of currency C and that you are told to find the price of currency B in terms of currency A (or equivalently, units of currency A / currency B).
First, find the exchange rates for A and B in the form: units of A / units of C and units of B / units of C.
Then: units of A / units B = (units of A/units of C) / (units of B/units of C)
26. The Spread Foreign exchange dealers quote two rates: the rate at which they will buy the currency and the rate at which they will sell the currency.
Example: A newspaper may report that the Swiss franc had a central rate of 1.5024 francs /$ and a bid/offer spread of 020 – 028.
This means that the two exchange rates were 1.5020 and 1.5028. The dealer would buy dollars (sell Swiss francs) for 1.5020 Swiss francs per dollar. He would sell dollars (buy Swiss francs) for 1.5028 Swiss francs per dollar.
When expressed as units of currency per dollar, the smaller rate is the bid rate: the rate at which the dealer will buy (bid for) dollars. The higher rate is the offer rate: the rate at which the dealer will sell (offer) dollars.
27. We can find cross rates with spreads In European form: The Swiss franc is 1.5020 – 1.5088 and the Swedish krona is 10.0025 – 10.0075. Find the kronar/franc cross rates.
The dealer will buy 1 Swiss franc for 1/1.5088 dollars. He will buy 1/1.5020 dollars for 10.0025/1.5088 = 6.6294 kronar. So, he will buy 1 Swiss franc for 6.6294 kronar.
The dealer will sell one Swiss franc for 1/1.5020 dollars. He will sell 1/1.5020 dollars for 10.0075/1.5020 =6.6628 kronar.
The kronar/franc cross rates are 6.6294 – 6.6628.
28. Types of Contracts Spot contracts -- a price and quantity are agreed upon. The two currencies are typically exchanged two business days later.
Forward contracts -- a fixed price contract made today for delivery of a certain amount of a currency at a specified future date. The specified date is the settlement date and the agreed price is the forward rate. More precisely, the two currencies are exchanged on an agreed upon date which is a certain number of days or months after the spot date. Thus, a three-month forward contract is conventionally settled in three months plus two days. Typically, no money changes hands at the time the contract is written
29. Example of a Forward Contract Frank Dollar, the foreign exchange manager at the Big American Automobile Company was informed that the BAAC is importing parts from Japan at a cost of 600 million yen, to be paid upon delivery in two months time. To protect the BAAC from exchange rate fluctuations, Frank Dollar arranged to purchase 600 million yen forward from Mega Bank. The two-month forward price was 120.00 yen/dollar. In two months and two days, Dollar paid 5 million dollars and received 600 million yen.
30. The Timing of the Contract At time zero: All of the details of the contract were worked out
At time zero plus two months and two days: The exchange is carried out.
31. Eurocurrency Markets Eurocurrency refers to deposits in a commercial bank which are denominated in a currency other than the currency issued by the country the bank is resident in. For example, a bank deposit denominated in dollars in a bank located in London is a Eurodollar deposit. It does not matter whether the bank is Barclays or an American bank.
32. Historical Background The Eurodollar market arose in the 1950s. The Soviet Union had large amounts of dollars from their oil sales. They did not want to hold them in the United States because of fears that the US would freeze them.
They found European banks that would accept their dollars as deposits. It is said that one was a French bank with the cable address eurobank, hence the name. Thus, there arose a large pool of dollars outside the United States and outside the control of US authorities.
In 1958 the British government introduced a restrictions on capital flows. British banks tried to get around these regulations by issuing loans dollar loans.
Euro markets were particularly attractive because they had far fewer regulations and offered higher yields. From the late 1980s onwards, US companies began to borrow and hold money offshore. British banks found it attractive to make loans in dollars.
London is the most important centre.
33. Covered Interest Arbitrage i = one-year interest rate on (Eurocurrency ) deposits denominated i* = one-year interest rate on (Eurocurrency) deposits denominated in the foreign currencye = spot price of the home currency in terms of the foreign currencyf = one-year forward price of the home currency in terms of the foreign currency
34. An investor has two options He can take one unit of the local currency and deposit it in an account denominated in the local currency.
At the end of the year, he will have 1 + i units of the home currency.
35. He can take one unit of the home currency and simultaneously: buy e units of the foreign currency and deposit it in an account denominated in the foreign currency. This will cause him to have (1 + i*)e units of foreign currency at the end of the year.
enter into a forward contract to sell (1 + i*)e units of the foreign currency at the end of the year at a forward rate f.
At the end of the year, his account will be worth (1 + i*)e units of foreign currency; he will carry out the forward transaction and end up with (1 + i*)e/f units of the home currency.
36. There will be arbitrage possibilities unless the two investment activities yield the same amount of foreign currency: Thus, we must have: (1 + i*) / (1 + i) = f /e.
This relationship is called uncovered interest parity