UNC-Chapel Hill ECON 560 - Dollar appreciation in 2008- safe haven, carry trades, dollar shortage and overhedging

Unformatted text preview:

Dollar appreciation in 2008Safe havenUnwinding of carry trades Dollar shortage Overhedging: non-US banks Overhedging: non-US institutional investors ConclusionReferencesBIS Quarterly Review, December 2009 85 Robert N [email protected] [email protected] Dollar appreciation in 2008: safe haven, carry trades, dollar shortage and overhedging1 This feature argues that a combination of factors caused the surprising US dollar appreciation in the second half of 2008. Both the global flight to safety into US Treasury bills and the reversal of carry trades amidst the crisis were sources of dollar strength. In addition, the surge in dollar funding costs in the interbank and FX swap markets provided price incentives for corporates to draw on non-dollar funding to pay down existing dollar debt. Finally, dollar asset writedowns left European banks and institutional investors outside the United States with overhedged dollar books. The squaring of their positions, which required dollar purchases, also boosted the currency. JEL classification: F3, G2. The US dollar’s appreciation in late 2008, as sharp as any in the period since generalised floating began in 1973, surprised many observers. After all, the most frequent global macroeconomic stress scenario before the eruption of the current crisis highlighted the risk of a sharp depreciation of the currency. Some ascribe the dollar’s rise to technical factors (Bénassy-Quéré et al (2009)). This feature argues that a combination of factors contributed to this surprising development. We first discuss the concept of safe haven and suggest that the US dollar benefited from the global flight to safety into US Treasury bills in late 2008. Then we present evidence that the dollar profited from the reversal of carry trades – the currencies that fell the most during the rise of equity volatility to its all-time peak in October 2008 offered the highest yields in the preceding six months. We then explain how a dollar shortage developed in the international banking market (despite years of US current account deficits) and resulted in high dollar interest rates that supported the currency. Finally, we argue that dollar asset declines left European banks and institutional investors outside the United States overhedged and that their squaring of their positions may have also boosted the dollar. As European banks wrote down the value of holdings of dollar securities, they had to purchase dollars in the spot market to retire the corresponding hedges or 1 The authors are grateful to Emir Emiray for research assistance and Claudio Borio and Stephen Cecchetti for comments. The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the BIS.86 BIS Quarterly Review, December 2009 liabilities. Similarly, European pension funds bought the dollar as they experienced losses on dollar securities hedged into the euro. Safe haven For some economists, the term “safe haven” indicates an asset with low risk and high liquidity, like the 10-year German government bund, which non-residents bought during the LTCM/Russian crisis (Upper (2000)). A complementary formulation is that a safe haven asset is what investors buy in uncertain times like the turn of the year 2000, as Kaul and Sapp (2006) assume the dollar was. Others have defined a safe haven as a hedge asset, one with a return unrelated (or negatively related) to that of the reference portfolio. A more restricted version is a rainy day asset, ie one that performs well when the reference portfolio suffers significant losses (Ranaldo and Söderlind (2007)). Taking refuge in a safe haven needs to be distinguished from another reaction to uncertainty, which has been called homing (Aderhold et al (1988)). After the stock market crash of 1987, for instance, investors tended to sell foreign equities. Since major stock markets had all fallen by similar degrees, this was interpreted as a decrease in the weight on foreign equities. Thus, for a time the crash’s trauma heightened investors’ bias to their home market. Net securities flows in the US balance of payments In billions of US dollars, annual rate Pre-crisis Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 2006– Q2 2007 Q3 2007– Q2 2008 Q3 2008– Q4 2008 Q1 2009– Q2 2009 Securities, total by private investors 368.8 –36.0 358.4 –244.6 Foreign purchases of US securities 765.0 189.9 60.0 12.7 Treasury –19.7 73.2 323.1 62.0 Coupon securities –22.9 –10.3 49.9 73.5 Bills 2.1 83.5 273.0 –11.6 Agencies 20.9 –107.4 –183.0 –98.8 Corporate bonds 572.8 82.5 –78.5 –34.3 Equities 191.0 141.6 –1.6 83.8 US purchases of foreign securities –396.1 –225.9 298.4 –257.2 Bonds –247.7 –113.3 200.7 –179.1 Equities –148.5 –112.6 97.7 –78.1 Memo: Foreign official assets in United States 494.7 614.3 199.1 391.8 Of which: Treasury bonds 194.2 172.1 103.9 275.9 Of which: Treasury bills –27.2 66.4 486.9 207.7 US official assets abroad 5.0 –62.1 –1,048.7 875.9 Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. Table 1BIS Quarterly Review, December 2009 87 The recent financial crisis led to homing in global bond markets, but also to safe haven demand for US Treasury securities, especially bills (Table 1). With the intensification of the crisis after the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy, US investors sought to de-risk their portfolios by selling foreign bonds and stocks in the latter half of 2008. For their part, private foreign investors turned to selling US corporate bonds, including asset-backed securities, and accelerated their sale of agency mortgage-backed bonds and debentures. In contrast to this homing, however, was the flight to quality by private foreign investors into Treasury securities. On these rainy days, the safe haven of Treasuries gained in value as equities plunged and credit spreads widened to record levels. While government bonds performed well in France, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, the attraction of Treasury bills kept global investors from staging a general retreat from US securities. To the extent that global investors sold other currencies against the dollar to take refuge in Treasuries, safe haven flows strengthened the dollar. Unwinding of carry trades A second source of pressure for dollar appreciation was the unwinding of carry trades. In a carry trade, an investor holds a


View Full Document

UNC-Chapel Hill ECON 560 - Dollar appreciation in 2008- safe haven, carry trades, dollar shortage and overhedging

Download Dollar appreciation in 2008- safe haven, carry trades, dollar shortage and overhedging
Our administrator received your request to download this document. We will send you the file to your email shortly.
Loading Unlocking...
Login

Join to view Dollar appreciation in 2008- safe haven, carry trades, dollar shortage and overhedging and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or
We will never post anything without your permission.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up

Join to view Dollar appreciation in 2008- safe haven, carry trades, dollar shortage and overhedging 2 2 and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or

By creating an account you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use

Already a member?