Transcript Document

Lecture 3
Foreign Exchange Markets
and Exchange Rates
Chapter 14 Foreign Exchange
Markets and Exchange Rates
14.1 introduction
14.2 Functions of the Foreign Exchange Markets
14.3 Foreign Exchange Rates
14.4 Spot and Forward Rates, Currency Swaps,
Futures, and Options
14.5 Foreign Exchange Risks, Hedging, and
Speculation
14.6 Interest Arbitrage and the Efficiency of
Foreign Exchange Markets
14.7 Eurocurrency or Offshore Financial Markets
14.1 introduction
Foreign Exchange Market:
– is the market in which individuals, firms,
and banks buy and sell foreign
currencies or foreign exchange.
14.2 Functions of the Foreign
Exchange Markets

The transfer of funds or purchasing power
from one nation and currency to another.
Demand for foreign currencies
-Import/expenditures abroad/investment abroad
Supply of foreign currencies
-Export/earnings from tourism/receipt of foreign investments


the credit function
the facilities for hedging and speculation
Four levels of transactors or participants
1. Immediate users and suppliers of foreign
currencies-importers/exporters/
tourists/investors
2. Clearinghouses-commercial bank
3. Foreign exchange brokers-interbank /
wholesale market
4. The nation’s central bank-lender of last
resort
14.3 Foreign Exchange Rates
FIGURE 14-1 The Exchange Rate Under a Flexible Exchange Rate System.
FIGURE 14-2 Disequilibrium Under a Fixed and Flexible Exchange Rate System.
Middle Exchange Rate of RMB
Date
Dollar
Euro
Yen
Pound
683.01
933.74
6.992
1002.52
2009-3-23
683.04
931.46
7.1024
990.34
2009-3-20
682.93
932.71
7.2149
990.18
2009-03-19
683.01
918.96
7.0863
972.98
2009-03-18
683.19
888.8
6.9208
959.3
2009-03-17
683.27
886.13
6.9389
961.36
2009-03-16
683.49
879.96
6.9478
954.25
• 2009-3-24
Source: www.safe.gov.cn
14.4 Spot and Forward Rates,
Currency Swaps, Futures, and Options
14.4a Spot and Forward Rates
14.4b Currency Swaps
14.4c Foreign Exchange Futures and Options
14.4a Spot and forward rates
• Spot transaction-Spot rate
– The most common type of foreign exchange
transaction involves the payment and receipt
of the foreign exchange within two business
days after the day the transaction is agreed
upon.
– The two-day period gives adequate time for
the parties to send instructions to debit and
credit the appropriate bank accounts at home
and abroad.
Forward transaction-Forward rate
• A forward transaction involves an
agreement today to buy or sell a specified
amount of a foreign currency at a specified
future date at a rate agreed upon today.
• One month; Three months; six months
• Forward contracts can be renegotiated for
one or more periods when they become
due.
• FD (forward discount)
If the forward rate is below the present spot rate,
the foreign currency is said to be at a forward
discount with respect to the domestic currency.
• FP (forward premium)
If the forward rate is above the present spot rate,
the foreign currency is said to be at a forward
premium with respect to the domestic currency.
14.4b Currency swaps
• Refer to a spot sale of a currency
combined with a forward repurchase of the
same currency-as part of a single
transaction.
• Swap rate: is the difference between the
spot and forward rates in the currency
swap. (a yearly basis)
14.4c Foreign exchange futures
and options
• A foreign exchange futures:
– is a forward contract for standardized
currency amounts and selected
calendar dates traded on an organized
market (exchange).
A foreign exchange option
• Is a contract giving the purchaser the right, but
not the obligation, to buy (a call option) or to sell
(a put option) a standard amount of a traded
currency on a stated date (the European option)
or at any time before a stated date (the
American option) and at a stated price (the strike
or exercise price)
• The buyer pays the seller a premium (the option
price) ranging from 1 to 5 percent of the
contract’s value for this privilege when he or she
enters the contract.
14.5 Foreign Exchange Risks,
Hedging, and Speculation
14.5a Foreign Exchange Risks
14.5b Hedging
14.5c Speculation
14.5a Foreign exchange risk
• Foreign exchange shift
1.Changes in tastes for domestic and foreign
products in the nation and abroad
2.Different growth and inflation rates in different
nations
3.Changes in relative rates of interest
4.Changing expectations
14.5b Hedging
• Refers to the avoidance of a foreign
exchange risk, or the covering of an open
position.
– At spot market
– At forward market
– At futures and options markets
14.5c Speculation
• The opposite of hedging.
• A speculator accepts and even seeks out
a foreign exchange risk, or an open
position, in the hope of making a profit.
• Speculation can take place in the spot,
forward, futures, or options markets
• Long position: when a speculator buys a foreign
currency on the spot, forward, or futures market,
or buys an option to purchase a foreign currency
in the expectation of reselling it at a higher future
spot rate.
• Short position: when a speculator borrows or
sells forward a foreign currency in the
expectation of buying it at a future lower price to
repay the foreign exchange loan or honor the
forward sale contract or option.