International Macroeconomics: Slides For Chapter 8: International Capital Market Integration
International Macroeconomics: Slides For Chapter 8: International Capital Market Integration
International Macroeconomics: Slides For Chapter 8: International Capital Market Integration
International Macroeconomics
Columbia University
May 1, 2016
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
1. Across countries
(b)
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
FIN
0.3
I/GDP
AUSTRIA
AUS
NET
GER
0.2 U.K
USA
0.15
0.15 0.2 0.25 0.3 0.35 0.4
S/GDP
Source: M. Feldstein and C. Horioka, “Domestic Saving and International Capital Flows,” Economic
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
! !
I S
= 0.035 + 0.887 + νi; R2 = 0.91
Q i (0.07) Q i
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
! !
I S
= constant + 0.52 + νi
Q i (0.06) Q i
Source: Yan Bai and Jing Zhang “Solving the Feldstein-Horioka Puzzle with Financial Frictions,”
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
22
20
18
Percent of GDP
16
14
12
10
6
1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
Year
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
No. Even under perfect capital market integration one could observe
a high S-I correlation.
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
In this lecture we will derive the CIRP condition and ask under what
conditions the UIRP condition holds.
Notation:
Nominal Endowments:
Period 1: Q1
g
Period 2, good state: Q2
Period 2, bad state: Qb2
Consumption:
Period 1: C1
g
Period 2, good state: C2
Period 2, bad state: C2b
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Notation (ctd.):
Exchange rates:
Period 1: S1 , spot exchange rate
Period 1: F1, forward exchange rate
g
Period 2, good state: S2, spot exchange rate in good state
Period 2, bad state: S2b , spot exchange rate in bad state
g
Expectations operator: E1x2 = πx2 +(1−π)xb2 denotes the expected
value of the variable x2 given information in period 1.
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
∗ S2
1 + i = (1 + i )E1
S1
As we will show below, under free capital mobility, CIRP must always
hold. At the same time uncovered interest rate parity typically fails.
For it to hold it would have to be the case that the forward rate is
equal to the expected future spot rate, that is, it would have to be
true that
F1 = E1S2
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Deriving CIRP...
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Households
Expected utility:
g
U = U (C1) + πU (C2) + (1 − π)U (C2b ) (1)
Budget Constraints:
Period 1:
Q1 = P1C1 + B1 + S1 B1∗ + S1B̃1∗ (2)
Period 2, good state:
g g g g
Q2 + (1 + i)B1 + (1 + i∗)F1B1∗ + (1 + i∗)S2 B̃1∗ = P2 C2 (3)
Period 2, bad state:
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
g
Household problem: Pick C1, C2, C2b , B1, B1∗ , and B̃1∗ to maximize
(1) subject to (2)-(4).
To make the problem easier to characterize solve (2) for C1, (3) for
g
C2, and (4) for C2b and use the resulting expressions to eliminate C1,
g
C2, and C2b from (1). Then we have a single objective function in
three unknowns, namely, B1, B1∗ , and B̃1∗ , which we pick to maximize
expected utility.
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Now take the first order condition w.r.t. B1, this yields:
1 g 1+i 1+i
U 0(C1) = πU 0 (C2) g + (1 − π)U 0 (C2b ) b
P1 P2 P2
U 0(C2) P1
( )
1 = (1 + i)E1
U 0(C1) P2
U 0(C2 ) P1
Finally, let M2 ≡ U 0(C1 ) P2
denote the nominal mrs between period
2 and period 1, to arrive at the following asset pricing condition:
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1 = (1 + i)E1 {M2 } (5)
International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
And the first-order condition w.r.t. to B1∗ plus forward cover is:
S F F
U 0(C1) 1 = π(1 + i∗)U 0(C2g ) 1g + (1 − π)(1 + i∗)U 0(C2b ) 1b
P1 P2 P2
Rewrite this expression as
0 (C g ) P 0 (C b ) P
" #
F 1 U U
1 = (1 + i∗) π 0 2 g + (1 − π) 0 2 1b
1
S1 U (C1) P2 U (C1) P2
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
(1 + i) = (1 + i∗) F
S
1 (7)
1
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
g b
0 S1 ∗ 0 g S2 ∗ 0 b S2
U (C1) = π(1 + i )U (C2) g + (1 − π)(1 + i )U (C2) b
P1 P2 P2
Rewrite this expression as
g 0
" g b 0 b
#
S U (C ) P S U (C ) P
1 = (1 + i∗) π 2 0 2 1g + (1 − π) 2 0 2 1b
S1 U (C1) P2 S1 U (C1) P2
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
F1E1M2 = E1S2 M2
but this expression does in general not imply that the forward rate,
F1, is equal to the expected future spot rate, S2. That is, it does
not follow from here that
F1 = E1S2
Hence, under free capital mobility, uncovered interest rate parity fails
in general.
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Recall that
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Suppose now that the depreciation rate, S2 /S1, is uncorrelated with
the pricing kernel, M2, that is, assume that
!
S2
cov , M2 =0
S1
F1 = E1S1 (9)
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
1. CIRD 1982-1988
3. China
4. Brazil
5. UK - Germany 1870-2000
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
F
Covered Interest Rate Differential = (1 + i) − (1 + i∗) .
S
i − i∗ − f s
Mean Std. Dev.
Germany 0.35 0.03
Switzerland 0.42 0.03
Mexico -16.7 1.83
France -1.74 0.32
The covered interest rate differential is measured by the domestic 3-month interest rate minus the
3-month Euro-dollar interest rate minus the forward discount. Source: J. Frankel, “Quantifying
In France barriers to the movement of capital were in place until 1986, which
explains the large average deviations from covered interest rate parity vis-a-vis
the two other industrialized countries shown in the table.
The fact that the country risk premia of France and Mexico are negative indicates
that capital controls were preventing capital from flowing out of these countries.
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
The table provides further evidence suggesting that the presence of capital controls
leads to deviations from covered interest rate parity.
This is most evident for France, where important capital market deregulation took
place in 1986.
In Italy, the high differential observed between 1990 and 1992 reflects market
fears that capital controls might be imposed to avoid realignment of the lira,
as an attempt to insulate the lira from speculative attacks, like the one that
took place in August/September 1992. These violent speculative attacks, which
affected a number of European economies, particularly, France, Sweden, Italy,
and England, led to exchange rate realignments and a temporary suspension of
the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) in September 1992. Once the
ERM was reestablished, the lira interest rate differential falls as fears of capital
controls vanish.
Japan had large onshore/offshore differentials between February 1987 and June
1990, which were the result of the Bank of Japan’s heavy use of administrative
guidelines to hold interbank rates below offshore rates.
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
How can you construct a test of free capital mobility between the
United States and Great Britain in the period prior to 1920.
There are two ways to get 1 pound in 90-days from now. Way 1:
put 1/(1 + i∗) on deposit in London. Way 2: take bt/St pounds
today, exchange them U.S. dollars. You get bt dollars. With those
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you can buy 1 British pound to be delivered in London 90 days from
now. Under free capital mobility it should be true that
1 bt
=
1 + i∗ St
So we can construct the following long-bill interest rate differential:
1
LBIRD = St − bt
(1 + i∗t )
compute the mean or the mean of the absolute value of those to
find the deviations from free capital mobility.
International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Source: This is figure 3.5 of Maurice Obstfeld and Alan M. Taylor, ‘Globalization and Capital Markets,’ in “Globalization in Historical Perspective,” Michael D. Bordo,
Alan M. Taylor and Jeffrey G. Williamson, editors, University of Chicago Press, January 2003.
The figure shows that the mean annual interest rate differential
was below 1 percent from 1870 to 1914, suggesting that there
was relatively high international capital mobility. Then in 1914 the
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mean differential suddenly becomes significantly negative. We see
UK rates being more than 1 percent below German rates, in some
years the differential is as high as 4 percent. Only in 1980 do we
see these interest rate differentials disappear, reaching consistently
levels below 0.5 percent. In fact, Great Britain abandoned capital
controls only in 1980. So a rough description of the history of
free capital mobility between the UK and Germany is, free capital
mobility between 1870 and 1914, then rather limited international
capital mobility between 1914 and 1980, and from 1980 onwards we
see very low CIRD indicating free capital mobility.
International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Brazil 2009-2012
The next figure shows the variable spreadt from June 2009 to December
2012.
The figure plots the variable spreadt. Ideally one would like to see
a value of zero until October 2009 and again starting in March
2012 and significantly positive in the meantime. The figure shows
that spreadt was higher during 2011. This suggests that the capital
contorls were not that effective until the year 2011. In that year the
spread was consistently higher than pre Oct 2009 and post March
2012 reaching up to 4 percent. The figure suggests that in the
periods without capital controls the spread is below one percent.
So I would conclude that yes at least in 2011 the controls lead to
non-zero CIRD.
International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Recall CIRP
∗ Ft
(1 + it) = (1 + it )
St
St+1 < St
(that is that the domestic currency will appreciate and the foreign
currency will depreciate)
Carry Trade
Borrow in the low interest rate currency, invest in the high interest
rate currency, and do not hedge the exchange rate risk.
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Suppose it < i∗t . Then borrow y at the rate it and invest in foreign
country at rate i∗t .
" #
∗ St+1
Payoff from Carry Trade: = (1 + it ) − (1 + it ) y
St
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
3. The fact that the average payoff from carry trade is non-zero
implies that UIRP fails empirically.
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4. Columns 4 and 7 of the table report the Sharpe Ratio, which is
defined as
mean(payoff)
Sharpe ratio =
std of payoff
The Sharpe ratio is a measure of risk. The higher the Sharpe
ratio, the higher the risk adjusted return. For comparision, note
that the Sharpe ratio of investing in the S&P 500 index over
the sample period was 0.14, which is comparable to the Sharpe
ratio of the carry trade.
Carry Trade returns are thought to have crash risk. The Economist
article refers to carry trade returns as “picking up nickels in front of
steamrollers.”
Suppose that you were a carry trader with 1 billion dollars short in
Yen and long in U.S. dollars. The payoff of that carry trade in the
span of 2 days was -140 million dollars — that is, the steamroller
caught up with the carry trader.
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
One might think that observed real interest rate differentials are a
good measure of capital market integration.
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International Macroeconomics, Chapter 8 Schmitt-Grohé, Uribe, Woodford
Our starting point is the Fisher relation, according to which the real
interest rate equals the nominal interst rate minus expected inflation.
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