Chapter 21 The Global Capital Market: Performance and Policy Problems

  Chapter 21 Chapter 21

  The Global Capital Market: The Global Capital Market:

  Performance and Policy Problems Performance and Policy Problems

  Prepared by Iordanis Petsas

To Accompany

International Economics: Theory and Policy International Economics: Theory and Policy , Sixth Edition

Chapter Organization

   Introduction

   The International Capital Market and the Gains from Trade

   International Banking and the International Capital Market

   Regulating International Banking

  

How Well Has the International Capital Market

Performed?

   Summary

  Introduction

   International capital market

  • The group of closed interconnected markets in which residents of different countries trade assets such as currencies, stocks and bonds
  • This chapter focus on three main questions:
    • – How has the international capital market enhanced countries’ gains from trade?
    • – What caused the rapid growth in international financial activity that has occurred since the early 1960s?
    • – How can policymakers minimize problems raised by a worldwide capital market without sharply reducing the benefits it provides?

  The International Capital Market and the Gains From Trade

   Three Types of Gain From Trade

  • All transactions between the residents of different countries fall into one of three categories:
    • – Trades of goods or services for goods or services
    • – Trades of goods or services for assets
    • – Trades of assets for assets
    The International Capital Market and the Gains From Trade Figure 21-1: The Three Types of International Transaction

  Goods and Services Assets Goods and Services Assets Home Foreign

  The International Capital Market and the Gains From Trade

   Risk Aversion

  • The risk associated with a trade of assets is shared when assets are traded internationally.
    • – When people are risk averse, countries can gain through the exchange of risky assets.
    • – International capital markets make these trades possible.
    The International Capital Market and the Gains From Trade

   Portfolio Diversification as a Motive for International Asset Trade

  • International portfolio diversification can allow residents of all countries to reduce the variability of their wealth.
    • – International capital markets make this diversification possible.
    The International Capital Market and the Gains From Trade

   The Menu of International Assets: Debt Versus Equity

  • International portfolio diversification can be carried out through the exchange of:
    • Debt instruments
    • – Bonds and bank deposits

  » They specify that the issuer of the instrument must repay a fixed value regardless of economic circumstances.

  • Equity instruments
  • – A share of stock

  » It is a claim to a firm’s profits, rather than to a fixed payment, and its payoff will vary according to circumstance.

  

The Structure of the International Capital Market

  International Banking and the International Capital Market

  • The main actors in the international capital market are:
    • – Commercial banks
    • – Corporations
    • – Nonbank financial institutions
    • – Central banks and other government agencies
    International Banking and the International Capital Market

  Figure 21-2: Borrowing in the International Capital Market

  International Banking and the International Capital Market

   Growth of the International Capital Market

  • The removal of barriers to private capital flows across countries’ borders has contributed to rapid growth in the international capital market.
  • A policy “trilemma” refers to three available options:
    • – Fixed exchange rate
    • – Monetary policy oriented toward domestic goals
    • – Freedom of international capital movements
    International Banking and the International Capital Market

  

Offshore Banking and Offshore Currency Trading

  • Offshore banking
    • – The business that banks’ foreign offices conduct outside of their home countries
    • – Banks operate offshore though any of three types of institution:
    • – Agency office
    • – Subsidiary bank
    • – Foreign branch

  • Offshore currency trading
    • – Trade in bank deposits denominated in currencies of countries other than the one in which the bank is located
    • – It is referred to as Eurocurrency trading.
    International Banking and the International Capital Market

  • Eurodollars
    • – Dollar deposits located outside the U.S.

  • Eurobanks
    • – Banks that accept deposits denominated in Eurocurrencies

  • Eurocurrency trading has grown for three reasons:
    • – Growth in world trade
    • – Evasion of financial regulations like reserve requirements
    • – Political concerns
    International Banking and the International Capital Market

   The Growth of Eurocurrency Trading

  • London is the leading center of Eurocurrency trading.
  • The early growth in the Eurodollar market was due to:
    • – Growing volume of international trade
    • – Cold War
    • – New U.S. restrictions on capital outflows and U.S. banking regulations
    • – Federal Reserve regulations on U.S. banks (e.g., the Fed’s Regulation Q)
    • – Move to floating exchange rates in 1973
    • – Reluctance of Arab OPEC members to place surplus funds in American banks after the first oil shock
    International Banking and the International Capital Market

  • International banking facilities (IBFs)
    • – Banks that accept time deposits and make loans to foreign customers.
    • – They are not subject to reserve requirements or interest rate ceilings.
    • – They are exempt from state and local taxes.
    Regulating International Banking

   The Problem of Bank Failure

  • A bank fails when it is unable to meet its obligations to its depositors.
  • Governments attempt to prevent bank failures through extensive regulation of their domestic banking systems.
Regulating International Banking

  • The main U.S. safeguards to reduce the risk of bank failure:
    • – Deposit insurance
    • – Reserve requirements
    • – Capital requirements and asset restrictions
    • – Bank examination
    • Lender of last resort (LLR) facilities
    • – The Fed lends to banks facing massive deposit outflows to satisfy their depositors’ claims.
    Regulating International Banking

   Difficulties in Regulating International Banking

  • Deposit insurance is essentially absent in international banking.
  • The absence of reserve requirements reduces the stability of the banking system.
  • Bank examination to enforce capital requirements and asset restrictions becomes more difficult in an international setting.
  • There is uncertainty over which central bank is responsible for providing LLR assistance in international banking.
Regulating International Banking

   International Regulatory Cooperation

  • Offshore banking is largely unprotected by the safeguards national governments have imposed to prevent domestic bank failures.
  • Basel Committee
    • – It is a group of central bank heads from 11 industrialized countries.
    • – It enhances regulatory cooperation in the international area.
    • – Its 1975 Concordat allocated national responsibility for monitoring banking institutions and provided for information exchange.

Regulating International Banking

  • A major change in international financial relations in the 1990s has been the rapidly growing importance of new emerging markets as sources and destinations for private capital flows.
  • The trend toward securitization has increased the need for international cooperation in monitoring and regulating nonbank financial institutions.
How Well Has the International Capital Market Performed?

   The Extent of International Portfolio Diversification

  • The international capital market has contributed to an increase in international portfolio diversification since 1970.
  • The extent of diversification appears small compared with what economic theory would predict.
How Well Has the International Capital Market Performed?

   The Extent of Intertemporal Trade

  • Some observers claim that the extent of international trade, as measured by countries’ current account balances, has been too small.
    • – These claims are hard to evaluate.

  Figure 21-3: Saving and Investment Rates for 25 Countries,

  1990-1997 Averages

  How Well Has the International Capital Market Performed?

  How Well Has the International Capital Market Performed?

   Onshore-Offshore Interest Differentials

  • If the world capital market is functioning well, international interest rates should move closely together and not differ too greatly.
    • – Large interest rate differences would be strong evidence of unrealized gains from trade.
    • – Data shows that rates of return on similar deposits issued in the major financial centers are quite close.

  

Figure 21-4: Comparing Eurodollar and Onshore United States Interest

  Rates

  How Well Has the International Capital Market Performed?

   The Efficiency of the Foreign Exchange Market

  • Exchange rates provide important signals to those who engage in international trade and investment.
  • Studies Based on Interest Parity
    • – The interest parity condition:

  R t

  • R* t

  = (E

  • E t

  et+1

  )/E t

   (21-1) where: R t is the date-t interest rate on home currency deposits

  R* t is the date-t interest rate on foreign currency deposits E et+1 is the expected exchange rate E t is the exchange rate

  How Well Has the International Capital Market Performed?

  How Well Has the International Capital Market Performed?

  • – The forecast error made in predicting future depreciation:

   u t+1 = (E t+1 – E t )/E t - (EE t )/E t (21-2) et+1

  • – Under interest parity, this hypothesis can be tested by writing u as actual currency depreciation less the t+1 international interest difference:

   u = (EE )/E - (R – R* ) (21-3) t+1 t+1 t t t t How Well Has the International Capital Market Performed?

  • The Role of Risk Premiums
    • – If bonds denominated in different currencies are imperfect substitutes for investors, the international interest rate difference equals expected currency t : depreciation plus a risk premium, 

   RR* = (EE )/E (21-4) t t et+1 t t t

  • +
    • Tests for Excessive Volatility
      • – They yield a mixed verdict on the foreign exchange performance.

    • The Bottom Line
      • – Evidence on foreign exchange market is ambiguous; more research and experience are needed.

  Summary

   When people are risk averse, countries can gain through the exchange of risky assets.

   International portfolio diversification can be carried out though the exchange of debt instruments of equity instruments.

   One important component in the international capital market is the foreign exchange market.

  • Banks are at the center of the international capital market, and many operate offshore.

  Summary

  

Regulatory and political factors have encouraged

offshore banking and currency trading.

   Creation of a Eurocurrency deposit does not occur

because that currency leaves its country of origin.

  • It poses no threat for central banks’ control over their domestic monetary bases.

   The Basel Committee has worked to enhance regulatory cooperation in the international area.

  • There is uncertainty about a central bank’s obligations as an international lender of last resort.

Summary

   The international capital market has contributed to an

increase in international portfolio diversification

since 1970.

   The foreign exchange market’s record in communicating appropriate price signals to international traders and investors is mixed.