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Structuring Local Currency Transactions: Case Studies
Structuring Local Currency Transactions: Case Studies

... An international provider of long‐term funding (the lender) approves a 5 year loan to a local microfinance institution (the borrower) in Kyrgyzstan with a 5% interest rate for the expansion of the bank’s micro and SME portfolio. Given that the borrower on lends to its customer base ...
Remittances and the Real Exchange Rate
Remittances and the Real Exchange Rate

... Assuming that non-tradables are normal goods, this positive income shock results in extra spending on both tradables and non-tradables. Since most Latin American countries are price takers in international markets, a growing demand does not raise prices of tradables. However, since the prices of non ...
The Benefits and Costs of Renminbi Internationalization
The Benefits and Costs of Renminbi Internationalization

... the euro noticeably reduced transaction costs in both financial markets and financial services and promoted global financial integration. They also found no evidence that currency internationalization made it more difficult to enforce monetary policy. Kim and Suh (2011) compared the gains with the l ...
ECONOMIC STUDIES 101 ERIK POST MACROECONOMIC
ECONOMIC STUDIES 101 ERIK POST MACROECONOMIC

Monetary Policy and Exchange Rate Interactions in a Small Open
Monetary Policy and Exchange Rate Interactions in a Small Open

... in alleviating the exchange rate puzzle in several other open economies; see Bjørnland (2006). After having allowed for a contemporaneous relationship between the interest rate and the exchange rate, the remaining VAR can be identified using standard recursive zero restrictions on the impact matrix ...
How Important Is the Shock-Absorbing Role of the
How Important Is the Shock-Absorbing Role of the

... productivity increases. The disproportionate increase in demand for nontradeables that followed resulted in appreciation of the real exchange rate. (De Gregorio, Giovannini, and Wolf, 1994). Second, the productivity di®erential between the tradable and non-tradable sectors has been increasing since ...
Impact of the Euro adoption on the Economy of Latvia
Impact of the Euro adoption on the Economy of Latvia

... tuations of the euro and the US dollar are likely to occur also in the future, an inference can be made that the lats peg to the euro will completely eliminate lats fluctuations relative to euro, while Latvia's exporters to the countries of the US dollar bloc are likely to experience an 8.2% increa ...
1st draft: March 28, 2010 Paper to be presented at the Fourth Annual
1st draft: March 28, 2010 Paper to be presented at the Fourth Annual

... investment accelerates when the effective rate of profit is higher than the required rate of profit. The logic comes from Keynes’s General Theory, according to which the asset demand for fixed capital rises when its corresponding real rate of return is high in relation to other assets. Since an incr ...
External Stability, Real Exchange Rate
External Stability, Real Exchange Rate

... Theories of external adjustment in open economies (e.g., Obstfeld and Rogoff 1995) imply that adjustment to external imbalances can be most efficiently obtained via RER adjustment, rather than via income/output/expenditure adjustment. Relative price movements cause expenditure switching between dom ...
No. 86
No. 86

... taxes can in principle affect international relative prices—the terms of trade and the real exchange rate—in a similar fashion as the exchange rate does. Policies of this type are referred to as fiscal devaluations. Setting a theoretical benchmark, Farhi et al. (2014) show that the effects of the no ...
The Gold Standard, Bretton Woods and Other Monetary Regimes: A
The Gold Standard, Bretton Woods and Other Monetary Regimes: A

... rates i-egimne (1971—89). The Bretton Woods period (1946—70) is divided into two suhperiods: the preconvertible phase (1946—58) and the convertilile phase (1959—70).’~ The comparison relates to the theoretical issues raised by the debate over fixed vs. flexible exchange rates. According to the tradi ...
Seminar Paper No. 740 AN ESTIMATED DSGE MODEL FOR SWEDEN
Seminar Paper No. 740 AN ESTIMATED DSGE MODEL FOR SWEDEN

... Moreover, we assume the existence of frictions in …nancial markets that create a wedge between the returns on domestic and foreign assets. As in Lindé, Nessén, and Söderström (2004), this risk premium is assumed to be a decreasing function of the country’s net foreign asset position. Price stability ...
Chapter 29
Chapter 29

... the central bank prints large quantities of money, the money loses value both in terms of the goods and services it can buy and in terms of the amount of other currencies it can buy. ...
Exchange rate arrangements and misalignments: contrasting words
Exchange rate arrangements and misalignments: contrasting words

... The rest of the paper proceeds as follows. The next section defines and measures the equilibrium real exchange rate and misalignment. The third one turns to the econometric analysis. Concluding remarks are offered in the last section. 2. Equilibrium real exchange rate and misalignment: definition a ...
Intranational, Intracontinental, and Intraplanetary PPP*
Intranational, Intracontinental, and Intraplanetary PPP*

... is much greater than the twenty-odd years that have passed since the decline of the Bretton Woods system and the move to floating exchange rates among major industrialized countries. One approach to solving the power problem is to use very long time series, but, as Frankel and Rose (1996) pointed ou ...
Political Institutions and Exchange-Rate
Political Institutions and Exchange-Rate

... institutions. These institutions do not operate in isolation, but their effect on exchangerate stability is likely to be conditioned by other institutions, economic constraints, and governments’ overall commitment to stability. One particularly salient factor in this regard is the de jure exchange-ra ...
The Bretton Woods International Monetary System
The Bretton Woods International Monetary System

... While Bretton Woods was relatively stable, it was also very short lived. From the declaration of par values by thirty-two countries on 18 December 1946 to the closing of the gold window on 15 August 1971, it lasted twenty-five years.’ However, most analysts would agree that, until the Western Europe ...
as a PDF
as a PDF

... objectives of interventions vary from resisting exchange rate movements that are perceived unjustified given the underlying fundamental determinants of exchange rates, to attempts to provide some leeway for domestic monetary policy against the impact of imported shocks to price stability or price c ...
Engineering Good Times: Fiscal Manipulation in a Global Economy
Engineering Good Times: Fiscal Manipulation in a Global Economy

... terms of trade—the unit price of a country’s exports relative to the unit price of its imports. High levels of trade do not necessarily lead to greater terms of trade volatility, 20 but in the absence of trade, such volatility would have no impact on the economy.21 Empirically, scholars have found ...
A NEW LOOK AT THE FORWARD PREMIUM PUZZLE
A NEW LOOK AT THE FORWARD PREMIUM PUZZLE

... premium puzzle, another literature has developed, starting with Meese and Rogoff (1983), documenting an equally startling puzzle—exchange rates do not seem to be related to fundamentals.1 The random walk model has proven almost unbeatable, even against models with a variety of finance and macro vari ...
OPTIMAL TRANSACTION FILTERS UNDER TRANSITORY
OPTIMAL TRANSACTION FILTERS UNDER TRANSITORY

... some level. These opportunities may be exploitable for instance at an intra-daily frequency as a reward for information acquisition when markets are efficient, or at a lower frequency to market timers when markets are inefficient. By nature these profit opportunities are predicable but transitory, a ...
- Open University of Tanzania Repository
- Open University of Tanzania Repository

... This study reflects on assessment of the micro economic factor hindering the growth of Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange market. The main target of this study was to determine the factors hindering the growth of Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange market. Four examined variables such as money supply exchange ra ...
united states securities and exchange commission - corporate
united states securities and exchange commission - corporate

... with a portfolio of approximately 147,000 communications sites. For more information about American Tower, please visit the “Earnings Materials” and “Company & Industry Resources” sections of our investor relations website at www.americantower.com . Non-GAAP and Defined Financial Measures In additio ...
Industry Price Adjustment to Exchange Rate
Industry Price Adjustment to Exchange Rate

... In this dissertation proposal I study the implications of some aspects of imperfect competition in the adjustment of import prices to exogenous exchange rate changes. First, form a theoretical perspective I study what role does market structure, strategic behavior and the type of competition played ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES WHAT DETERMINES EUROPEAN REAL EXCHANGE RATES? Martin Berka
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES WHAT DETERMINES EUROPEAN REAL EXCHANGE RATES? Martin Berka

... GDP per capita and real exchange rates for a number of countries. For countries such as Ireland, where relative GDP per capita moved from being below the EU average to being above the EU average over the sample, the deviation of relative GDP from the EU average switched from being below the real exc ...
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Foreign exchange market

The foreign exchange market (forex, FX, or currency market) is a global decentralized market for the trading of currencies. This includes all aspects of buying, selling and exchanging currencies at current or determined prices. In terms of volume of trading, it is by far the largest market in the world. The main participants in this market are the larger international banks. Financial centres around the world function as anchors of trading between a wide range of multiple types of buyers and sellers around the clock, with the exception of weekends. The foreign exchange market determines the relative values of different currencies.The foreign exchange market works through financial institutions, and it operates on several levels. Behind the scenes banks turn to a smaller number of financial firms known as “dealers,” who are actively involved in large quantities of foreign exchange trading. Most foreign exchange dealers are banks, so this behind-the-scenes market is sometimes called the “interbank market”, although a few insurance companies and other kinds of financial firms are involved. Trades between foreign exchange dealers can be very large, involving hundreds of millions of dollars. Because of the sovereignty issue when involving two currencies, forex has little (if any) supervisory entity regulating its actions.The foreign exchange market assists international trade and investments by enabling currency conversion. For example, it permits a business in the United States to import goods from European Union member states, especially Eurozone members, and pay Euros, even though its income is in United States dollars. It also supports direct speculation and evaluation relative to the value of currencies, and the carry trade, speculation based on the interest rate differential between two currencies.In a typical foreign exchange transaction, a party purchases some quantity of one currency by paying with some quantity of another currency. The modern foreign exchange market began forming during the 1970s after three decades of government restrictions on foreign exchange transactions (the Bretton Woods system of monetary management established the rules for commercial and financial relations among the world's major industrial states after World War II), when countries gradually switched to floating exchange rates from the previous exchange rate regime, which remained fixed as per the Bretton Woods system.The foreign exchange market is unique because of the following characteristics: its huge trading volume representing the largest asset class in the world leading to high liquidity; its geographical dispersion; its continuous operation: 24 hours a day except weekends, i.e., trading from 22:00 GMT on Sunday (Sydney) until 22:00 GMT Friday (New York); the variety of factors that affect exchange rates; the low margins of relative profit compared with other markets of fixed income; and the use of leverage to enhance profit and loss margins and with respect to account size.As such, it has been referred to as the market closest to the ideal of perfect competition, notwithstanding currency intervention by central banks.According to the Bank for International Settlements,the preliminary global results from the 2013 Triennial Central Bank Survey of Foreign Exchange and OTC Derivatives Markets Activity show that trading in foreign exchange markets averaged $5.3 trillion per day in April 2013. This is up from $4.0 trillion in April 2010 and $3.3 trillion in April 2007. Foreign exchange swaps were the most actively traded instruments in April 2013, at $2.2 trillion per day, followed by spot trading at $2.0 trillion.According to the Bank for International Settlements, as of April 2010, average daily turnover in global foreign exchange markets is estimated at $3.98 trillion, a growth of approximately 20% over the $3.21 trillion daily volume as of April 2007. Some firms specializing on foreign exchange market had put the average daily turnover in excess of US$4 trillion.The $3.98 trillion break-down is as follows: $1.490 trillion in spot transactions $475 billion in outright forwards $1.765 trillion in foreign exchange swaps $43 billion currency swaps $207 billion in options and other products↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑
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