Chapter 7
Chapter 7
Chapter 7
CURRENCY MARKETS
The foreign exchange market is the market in which currencies are bought and sold against each other.
The inter-bank foreign exchange market is an over-thecounter (OTC) market. London is the largest centre followed by New York/Tokyo. 20-25 other smaller centres. Average transaction size is about USD 5 million The participants in the wholesale market are commercial banks, investment institutions, corporations and central banks. Currency brokers act as middlemen between dealers A small number of currencies account for bulk of turnover: USD, EUR, GBP, CHF, JPY, CAD, AUD
3988
1305 433
SWAPS
US$ vs. OTHERS EURO vs. OTHERS JPY vs. OTHERS GBP vs. OTHERS
2250
2660.262 1139.406 509.731 460.779
208.790
The forex market has not escaped the impact of global deleveraging and the failure of Lehman Brothers in 2008. Central banks from around the world have released their semiannual foreign exchange surveys and based upon all of the reports, forex trading volume decreased significantly between April 2008 and April 2009. The lack of participation may explain why the major currency pairs have been stuck in a range since the beginning of May. In New York for example, forex spot trading volume fell to the lowest level in more than 3 years. London remains the most active forex trading center followed by NY and Tokyo. The EUR/USD is still the most actively traded currency pair by far.
Source: BIS
of trade in goods and services compared to the global average. Thus for most Asian currencies activity in the markets is driven largely by trade.
Due to controls on capital flows, transactions with financial customers form a low share of total turnover for most Asian currencies. The exceptions are SGD and HKD. For most Asian currencies, over 90% of the turnover is against the US dollar.
Again due to capital controls, the share of non-residents in the total turnover is quite small.
CURRENCY MARKETS
Among the participants, primary price makers or professional dealers make a two-way market to each other and to their clients
Foreign currency brokers act as middlemen between two market makers. Their main function is to provide information to market-making banks Corporations usually are price takers. However, some nonbank, non-financial companies do act as market makers.
Large money centre banks deal in a large number of currencies. Smaller banks have a restricted range.
It is a 24-hour market
The business day opens in Wellington, New Zealand, followed by Sydney, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore. A few hours later, trading begins in Bahrain. Late in the Tokyo day, markets open in Europe. In the early afternoon in Europe, markets open in the United States. In the mid to late afternoon in New York, markets open in the Asia-Pacific area. Most of the activity takes place when European markets are open.
CURRENCY MARKETS
Geographically, the markets span all the time zones from Auckland, New Zealand to Los Angeles, United States. 3.00 pm in Tokyo 2.00 pm in Hong Kong. 1.00 pm in Singapore. 12.00 noon in Bahrain.
London, Tokyo and New York account for about 50% volume.
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Asia closing
Afternoon in America
6 pm Tokyo In NY opens
In 2005 :
The daily trading range was as much as 12% The average monthly difference between high and low
was 35%
Volatility is always part of the market behaviour Annual currency volatility is typically 1020% (or more)
Inter-bank Dealing
Corporate Desk of Bank A or I/B Desk of Bank B I/B Desk of Bank A
I/B Desk
of Bank C
Export / Import Desk of Bank A Client of Bank A Outward / Inward Remittance Desk of Bank A
Because two currencies are involved in each transaction the percentages sum to 200. Source: BIS
Currency
United States dollar Euro Japanese yen Pound sterling Swiss franc Australian dollar Canadian dollar Swedish krona Hong Kong dollar Norwegian krone New Zealand dollar Mexican peso
% daily share (April 2007) 86.3% 37.0% 17.0% 15.0% 6.8% 6.7% 4.2% 2.8% 2.8% 2.2% 1.9% 1.3%
USD ($) EUR () JPY () GBP () CHF (Fr) AUD ($) CAD ($) SEK (kr) HKD ($) NOK (kr) NZD ($) MXN ($)
13
14
Singapore dollar
South Korean won
SGD ($)
KRW () Other
1.2%
1.1% 14.5%
Total
200%
CURRENCY MARKETS
Spot Markets : Value date two business days from transaction date. If bank holiday in either settlement centre, push to next business day. Outright Forwards : Value date three business days and beyond.
Standard forward dates : 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, 12 months. Spot value date plus required calendar months. If holiday, push forward to next eligible business day; but pushing forward must not carry you to next calendar month; then push back
Swaps : A spot plus a forward or two forwards. Buy USD spot vs. INR, sell USD 3 month forward vs.INR. Sell USD 1 month forward, buy USD 3 month forward vs. GBP.
Rank
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Name
Deutsche Bank UBS AG Barclays Capital Royal Bank of Scotland Citi JPMorgan HSBC Goldman Sachs Credit Suisse BNP Paribas
Market Share
20.96% 14.58% 10.45% 8.19% 7.32% 5.43% 4.09% 3.35% 3.05% 2.26%
The monthly turnover in the inter-bank segment of the foreign exchange market in India increased from US $405 billion in March 2006 to US $533 billion in March 2007 and that in the merchant segment from US $141 billion to US $192 billion. As of now the average daily turnover is estimated to be around $35 billion.
Bulk of this is in the Mumbai market. Other centres are Delhi, Kolkata and Chennai.
CURRENCY MARKETS
A spot GBP/USD deal on Friday December 12: Value date Tuesday December 16 If December 16 holiday in NY/London, value date December 17. Suppose the deal is between a French and a German bank and December 16 is holiday in Paris but not London or NY. Push forward?
A 2-month forward deal USD/CHF on Monday Dec 22: Value date Feb 24. If holiday in NY/Zurich, Aug 17.
A 3-month forward USD/JPY on Nov 26, 2008. Value date Feb 28, 2009. If holiday in Tokyo/NY, push forward? NO. Pushing forward must not carry into next calendar month. Push back to Feb 27, 2009. Could have pushed forward in a leap year February 29. Spot deals in some currency pairs in the same time zone such as US dollar-Canadian dollar, US dollar- Mexican peso settled in one business day
CURRENCY MARKETS
ACI QUOTATION CONVENTIONS
SPOT RATE QUOTATIONS:
Most currencies quoted with USD as base. Exceptions are EUR, GBP, AUD, NZD, CAD
Quotation given as no. of units of quoted currency per unit of base currency, bid rate/offer rate.
Bid rate applies to market-maker buying base currency. Offer rate applies to market-maker selling base currency.
CURRENCY MARKETS
Currency Codes : All currencies have a 3-letter code used by SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Inter-bank Financial Telecommunications) for all inter-bank transactions.
USD : US Dollar CAD : Canadian Dollar GBP : British Pound SAR : Saudi Riyal SEK : Swedish Kroner CHF : Swiss Franc KRW : Korean Won AUD : Australian Dollar JPY : Japanese Yen INR : Indian Rupee EUR : Euro DKK : Danish Kroner SGD : Singapore Dollar THB : Thai Baht
CURRENCY MARKETS
SPOT QUOTES : EXAMPLES USD/CHF SPOT: 1.2075/1.2080
Bid Offer (Ask)
Bank will buy 1 USD and give CHF 1.2075 Bank will sell 1 USD and want to be paid CHF 1.2080. Shortened to 1.2075/80 or even 75/80 between dealers. 1.20 is the big figure
CURRENCY MARKETS
SPOT QUOTES : EXAMPLES
Interpret these quotes : GBP/USD : 1.5218/25 EUR/USD : 1.2525/30
GBP/EUR : 1.2150/55 USD/INR : 49.1850/49.2075 USD/JPY : 98.3550/55 Most currencies quoted upto six significant figures. Last two figures known as points or pips. A pip is 0.0001. In the GBP/USD quote the bid-offer spread is 8 pips. Smaller currencies such as JPY and INR are quoted to 2 decimals in merchant segments. Here a pip is 0.01
CURRENCY MARKETS
Quotations in European Terms: Units of a currency per US dollar. Example : USD/INR : 48.5560/675 Quotations in American Terms : US dollars per unit of a currency. Example : GBP/USD : 1.6650/55 Direct Quotations: Units of home currency per unit of foreign currency. Example : USD/INR above, a direct quote in India. Reciprocal or Indirect Quotations: Units of foreign currency per unit of home currency. Example:
BANK A : Mine
(Bank A dealer finds bank Bs price acceptable and wishes to buy USD 25 million. She conveys this by saying mine; if she wanted to sell USD she would say yours)
CURRENCY MARKETS
Inter-bank Arbitrage : Suppose banks A and B are quoting : A B GBP/USD : 1.6550/1.6560 1.6338/1.6348 --------- Bank A Bid Ask ---------- Bank B Bid Ask Buy GBP from bank B, sell to bank A. Prices will move. A B GBP/USD : 1.6652/1.6662 1.6648/1.6658 --------- Bank A ---------- Bank B No arbitrage. Quotes must overlap.
Arbitrage Opportunity? Buy Swiss francs 1 million in Zurich sell in New York.
$(1,000,000/1.2955) i.e. $771902.74 needed to acquire the Swiss francs. $(0.7728 1000000) i.e. $772800, obtained on selling, a riskless profit of $897. Zurich USD/CHF quotes imply certain CHF/USD quotes:
The rates actually found in the markets will obey the above relations to a very close approximation.
GBP/USD: 1.6015/20 USD/INR: 48.7550/48.7650 GBP/EUR: 1.2735/45 USD/GBP ? INR/USD ? EUR/GBP?
3-Point ARBITRAGE.
Citibank New York
End with $1,002,538 Start with $1,000,000 (1) Sell $1,000,000 to Barclays Bank at $1.8410/
(6)
Receive $1,002,538
Dresdner Bank
(5)
(4)
Receive 543,183
Sell 543,183 to Dresdner Bank at 1.5100/
(2) Bid-Ask spread must widen as you go farther out into future
(2) Sell USD spot, buy 3 months forward, forward buying or bid rate would be 10 points above spot.
In a swap, amount of one currency - usually the base currencyis kept same in the spot and the forward leg. Buy USD 1m spot, sell USD 1m forward. Amount of SEK will be different.
BROKEN DATES
Standard forwards are whole months. Banks will do any number of days forward - 63 days, 135 days etc. These are broken date or odd date forwards.
Interpolate between two whole month dates. OK if the gap between the two dates is not too long and no special technical factors are at work. Example:
USD/INR spot 48.55/56 1 month:8/10 2 months:15/20 Recall that for INR each point is 0.01. Customer wants to buy USD 43 days forward.
10paise (Rs.0.10) premium on the offer side from 1month to 2months. Suppose 30 days in 2nd month. 1/3paisa (1/3 of Rs.0.01) per day, 4 paise(Rs.0.04) for 12 days. The interpolated rate would be : 48.56+0.10+0.04 = 48.70
SHORT DATES
Delivery same day- cash Delivery next day - Tomorrow or Tom. Markets quote Overnight (O/N), Tom(orrow)/Next (T/N) and Spot/Next (S/N) swaps. These are used to compute rates for short date transactions.
If you wish to sell CHF (buy USD) delivery tomorrow bank sells delivery spot and then does a swap buy CHF (sell USD) delivery spot, sell CHF (buy USD) delivery TOM. In this the bank suffers a 5-point discount which it would recover from you. Hence it charges you CHF 1.1755 per USD you wish to buy.
Hence the rule: Reverse swap points and follow the rule BIG/SMALL subtract, SMALL/BIG add. Same logic works for cash same day delivery. Now look at O/N swap points. From spot and T/N derive TOM quotes; then from TOM quotes and O/N swap quote derive CASH quotes following the same rule.
SWIFT
WHAT IS SWIFT?
The acronym SWIFT stands for Society for Worldwide
Financial and non-financial messages can be transmitted which cover Funds Transfers between customers/banks, letters of credit/bank guarantees, customer account status, draft advices, foreign exchange transactions, nostro/vostro accounts status etc. Message security is better as compared to other means of message transmission.
Standardized message formats eliminate ambiguity and facilitate automated handling at the source and the destination. Message authentication is automatic. SWIFT has a Regional Processor (RP) in each host country through which all messages meant for that country are routed. In India RP is located in the premises of M/s. CMC Ltd. at World Trade Centre, Cuffe Parade, Bombay. Each user in that country is required to install a Computer based Terminal (CBT) in his own premises. The CBT is a device for interfacing with the SWIFT RP through the telephone lines.