Transfer of short-term liquid funds abroad to earn a higher rate of return, entailing foreign exchange risk due to possible depreciation of the foreign currency
Covered interest arbitrage
Spotpurchase of the foreign currency to make the investment and the offsetting simultaneous forwardsale of the foreign currency to cover, or remove, the foreign exchange risk
Covered interest arbitrage tends to force a relationship between forwardrate premiums and interestrate differentials
Covered interest arbitrage example
Borrow $ at 3% or use existing funds which are earning interest at 2%. Convert $ to £ at $1.60/£ and engage in a 90-day forward contract to sell £ at $1.60/£. Lend £ at 4%.
Comparing arbitrage strategies
Locational: capitalizes on discrepancies in arbitrage exchangerates across locations
Triangular: capitalizes on discrepancies in arbitrage cross-exchangerates
Covered: capitalizes on discrepancies interest between the forwardrate and the arbitrage interestrate differential
Any discrepancy will trigger arbitrage, which will then eliminate the discrepancy, thus making the foreign exchange market more orderly
Interestrateparity (IRP)
As a result of market forces, the forward rate differs from the spot rate by an amount that sufficiently offsets the interest rate differential between two currencies
Interest rate parity - A currency is worth what it can earn
The return on a currency is the interestrate on that currency plus the expectedrate of appreciation over a given period
When the returns on two currencies are equal, interestrateparity prevails
Violation of IRP
An arbitrage opportunity exists if the forwardrate is the same as the spot rate, but the interest rates are different
If domestic interest rates are less than foreign interest rates
Domestic investors can benefit by investing in the foreign market
If domestic interest rates are more than foreign interest rates
Foreign investors can benefit by investing in the domestic market
Derivation of IRP
The rate of return achieved from coveredinterestarbitrage should equal the rate of return available in the home country
Empirical studies indicate that IRP generally holds, but there are deviations often not large enough to make covered interest arbitrage worthwhile
Considerations when assessing IRP
Political risk
Differential taxlaws
Carry trade
Borrowing of funds in low-yielding currencies and lending in high-yielding currencies
Carry trade opportunities are short-lived as arbitrage activities quickly restore interest rate parity
Efficiency of foreign exchange markets
Markets are efficient if forward rates accurately predict futurespot rates
Eurocurrency
Commercial bank deposits outside the country of their issue
Examples of Eurocurrency
Eurodollar
Eurosterling
Eurodeposit
Eurocurrency market
The market in which the borrowing and lending of Eurocurrency balances takes place
Reasons for offshore deposits include higher interestrates on short term deposits abroad compared to domestic rates, and convenience for international corporations to hold balances abroad in needed currencies
Efficiency of Foreign Exchange Markets
Markets are efficient if prices reflect all possible information
The foreign exchange market is efficient if forward rates accurately predict futurespotrates
Empirical evidence on the efficiency of foreign exchange markets is mixed
Eurocurrency
Eurodollar
Eurosterling
Eurodeposit
Reasons for Offshore Deposits
Interest rates on shortterm deposits abroad are often higher than domestic rates
Internationalcorporations often find it convenient to hold balances abroad for short periods in currency they need forpayments
International corporations can overcome domestic credit restrictions by borrowing in the Eurocurrency market
Eurobonds
Long-term debt securities sold outside the borrower's country to raise long-term capital in a currency other than the currency of the nation where the bonds are sold
Euronotes
Medium-term financial instruments used by corporations, banks and countries to borrow medium-term funds in a currency other than the currency in which the notes are sold
Purchasing PowerParity (PPP) does not necessarily hold
Investors have limited information on corporate exposure but can make approximate estimates of the effect of exchange rate changes on share value
MNC shareholders can hedge against exchange rate fluctuations on their own
A well-diversified MNC should not be affected by exchangerate movements because of offsetting effects, but this is a naive presumption as few are that well diversified