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Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Lecture
# 31
Foreign
Exchange & Financial
Institutions
The
foreign
exchange (currency
or
forex
or
FX)
market
exists
wherever one currency is
traded
for another. It is by far
the largest financial market
in the world, and includes
trading
between
large banks, central banks,
currency speculators, multinational
corporations,
governments,
and other financial markets and
institutions. The average
daily trade in the
global
forex and related markets
currently is over US$ 3
trillion. Retail traders
(individuals)
are
a small fraction of this
market and may only
participate indirectly through
brokers or
banks,
and are subject to forex
scams.
Market
size and liquidity
The
foreign exchange market is
unique because of
its
trading volume,
·
the
extreme liquidity of the
market,
·
the
large number of, and variety
of, traders in the
market,
·
its
geographical dispersion,
·
its
long trading hours: 24 hours
a day (except on
weekends),
·
the
variety of factors that
affect exchange rates.
·
the
low margins of profit compared
with other markets of fixed
income (but
·
profits
can be high due to very large
trading volumes)
According
to the BIS, average daily
turnover in traditional foreign
exchange markets is
estimated
at $3,210 billion. Daily
averages in April for
different years, in billions of US
dollars,
are presented on the chart
below:
This
$1.88 trillion in global
foreign exchange market
"traditional" turnover was
broken
down
as follows:
$1,005
billion in spot transactions
·
$362
billion in outright
forwards
·
$1,714
billion in forex
swaps
·
$129
billion estimated gaps in
reporting
·
In
addition to "traditional" turnover,
$2.1 trillion was traded in
derivatives.
Exchange-traded
forex futures contracts were
introduced in 1972 at the Chicago
Mercantile
Exchange
and are actively traded relative to
most other futures
contracts. Forex
futures
volume
has grown rapidly in recent
years, and accounts for
about 7% of the total
foreign
exchange
market volume, according to
The Wall Street Journal
Europe (5/5/06, p.
20).
Average
daily global turnover in
traditional foreign exchange
market transactions
totaled
$2.7
trillion in April 2006 according to
IFSL estimates based on
semi-annual London,
New
York,
Tokyo and Singapore Foreign Exchange
Committee data. Overall
turnover, including
non-traditional
foreign exchange derivatives and
products traded on exchanges,
averaged
around
$2.9 trillion a day. This
was more than ten times
the size of the combined
daily
turnover
on all the world's equity
markets. Foreign exchange
trading increased by
38%
between
April 2005 and April 2006 and has
more than doubled since
2001. This is largely
due
to the growing importance of
foreign exchange as an asset
class and an increase in
fund
109
Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
management
assets, particularly of hedge
funds and pension funds. The
diverse selection of
execution
venues such as internet
trading platforms has also
made it easier for retail
traders
to
trade in the foreign exchange
market.
Because
foreign exchange is an OTC
market where brokers/dealers negotiate
directly with
one
another, there is no central
exchange or clearing house. The biggest
geographic trading
center
is the UK, primarily London,
which according to IFSL
estimates has increased
its
share
of global turnover in traditional
transactions from 31.3% in
April 2004 to 32.4% in
April
2006. RPP
The
ten most active traders
account for almost 73% of
trading volume, according to
The
Wall
Street Journal Europe, (2/9/06 p.
20). These large international banks
continually
provide
the market with both
bid (buy) and ask (sell)
prices. The bid/ask spread is
the
difference
between the price at which a
bank or market maker will
sell ("ask", or
"offer")
and
the price at which a
market-maker will buy ("bid")
from a wholesale customer.
This
spread
is minimal for actively traded pairs of
currencies, usually 03
pips. For example,
the
bid/ask
quote of EUR/USD might be
1.2200/1.2203. Minimum trading size
for most deals is
usually
$100,000.
These
spreads might not apply to
retail customers at banks, which will
routinely mark up
the
difference to say 1.2100 / 1.2300 for
transfers, or say 1.2000 / 1.2400 for
banknotes or
travelers'
checks. Spot prices at market makers vary,
but on EUR/USD are usually
no more
than
3 pips wide (i.e. 0.0003).
Competition has greatly
increased with pip spreads
shrinking
on
the major pairs to as little as 1 to 2
pips.
Market
participants
Unlike
a stock market, where all
participants have access to
the same prices, the
forex
market
is divided into levels of
access. At the top is the
inter-bank market, which is
made up
of
the largest investment
banking firms. Within the
inter-bank market, spreads,
which are
the
difference between the bid
and ask prices, are razor sharp and
usually unavailable, and
not
known to players outside the
inner circle. As you descend
the levels of access,
the
difference
between the bid and ask
prices widens (from 0-1 pip
to 1-2 pips only for
major
currencies
like the Euro). This is due
to volume. If a trader can guarantee
large numbers of
transactions
for large amounts, they can
demand a smaller difference between
the bid and
ask
price, which is referred to as a
better spread. The levels of
access that make up the
forex
market
are determined by the size of
the "line" (the amount of
money with which they
are
trading).
The top-tier inter-bank
market accounts for 53% of
all transactions. After that
there
are
usually smaller investment
banks, followed by large
multi-national corporations
(which
need
to hedge risk and pay
employees in different countries),
large hedge funds, and
even
some
of the retail forex market
makers. According to Galati and Melvin,
"Pension funds,
insurance
companies, mutual funds, and other
institutional investors have
played an
increasingly
important role in financial
markets in general, and in FX markets in
particular,
since
the early 2000s." (2004) In
addition, he notes, "Hedge funds
have grown markedly
over
the 20012004 period in
terms of both number and
overall size" Central banks
also
participate
in the forex market to align
currencies to their economic
needs.
Banks
The
interbank market caters for
both the majority of
commercial turnover and large
amounts
of
speculative trading every
day. A large bank may trade
billions of dollars daily.
Some of
this
trading is undertaken on behalf of
customers, but much is
conducted by proprietary
desks,
trading for the bank's own
account.
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Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Until
recently, foreign exchange
brokers did large amounts of
business, facilitating
interbank
trading and matching anonymous
counterparts for small fees.
Today, however,
much
of this business has moved
on to more efficient electronic systems,
such as EBS (now
owned
by ICAP), Reuters Dealing 3000
Matching (D2), the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange,
Dukascopy
- Swiss FX Marketplace, FXMarketSpace,
Bloomberg, and TradeBook(R).
The
broker
squawk box lets traders
listen in on ongoing interbank
trading and is heard in most
trading
rooms, but turnover is
noticeably smaller than just
a few years ago.
Central
banks
National
central banks play an important
role in the foreign exchange
markets. They try to
control
the money supply, inflation,
and/or interest rates and
often have official or
unofficial
target
rates for their currencies.
They can use their often
substantial foreign
exchange
reserves
to stabilize the market.
Milton Friedman argued that
the best stabilization
strategy
would
be for central banks to buy
when the exchange rate is
too low, and to sell when
the
rate
is too high -- that is, to
trade for a profit based on
their more precise
information.
Nevertheless,
the effectiveness of central
bank "stabilizing speculation" is
doubtful because
central
banks do not go bankrupt if they make
large losses, like other
traders would, and
there
is no convincing evidence that
they do make a profit
trading.
The
mere expectation or rumor of central
bank intervention might be
enough to stabilize a
currency,
but aggressive intervention
might be used several times
each year in
countries
with
a dirty float currency
regime. Central banks do not
always achieve their
objectives.
The
combined resources of the
market can easily overwhelm
any central bank.
Several
scenarios
of this nature were seen in
the 199293 Enron
collapse, and in more recent
times
in
Southeast Asia.
Investment
management firms
Investment
management firms (who
typically manage large
accounts on behalf of
customers
such
as pension funds and endowments)
use the foreign exchange
market to facilitate
transactions
in foreign securities. For
example, an investment manager with an
international
equity
portfolio will need to buy and
sell foreign currencies in
the spot market in order
to
pay
for purchases of foreign
equities. Since the forex
transactions are secondary to
the
actual
investment decision, they
are not seen as speculative
or aimed at profit-maximization.
Some
investment management firms also
have more speculative
specialist currency
overlay
operations,
which manage clients'
currency exposures with the
aim of generating profits
as
well
as limiting risk. Whilst the
number of this type of
specialist firms is quite
small, many
have
a large value of assets
under management (AUM), and hence can
generate large trades.
Hedge
funds
Hedge
funds, such as George Soros's
Quantum fund have gained a
reputation for
aggressive
currency
speculation since 1990. They
control billions of dollars of
equity and may borrow
billions
more, and thus may overwhelm
intervention by central banks to support
almost any
currency,
if the economic fundamentals
are in the hedge funds'
favor.
Retail
forex brokers
Retail
forex brokers or market makers
handle a minute fraction of
the total volume of
the
foreign
exchange market. According to
CNN, one retail broker
estimates retail volume
at
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Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
$2550
billion daily, which is
about 2% of the whole market
and it has been reported by
the
CFTC
website that un-experienced
investors may become targets of
forex scams.
Trading
characteristics
There
is no unified or centrally cleared market
for the majority of FX trades, and
there is
very
little cross-border regulation. Due to
the over-the-counter (OTC)
nature of currency
markets,
there are rather a number of
interconnected marketplaces, where
different currency
instruments
are traded. This implies
that there is not a
single
dollar
rate but rather a
number
of
different rates (prices),
depending on what bank or
market maker is trading. In
practice
the
rates are often very close,
otherwise they could be
exploited by arbitrageurs
instantaneously.
A joint venture of the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange and
Reuters, called
FXMarketSpace
opened in 2007 and aspires to the
role of a central market
clearing
mechanism.
The
main trading centers are in
London, New York, Tokyo, and
Singapore, but banks
throughout
the world participate.
Currency trading happens
continuously throughout
the
day;
as the Asian trading session
ends, the European session
begins, followed by the
North
American
session and then back to the
Asian session, excluding
weekends.
There
is little or no 'inside information' in
the foreign exchange
markets. Exchange rate
fluctuations
are usually caused by actual
monetary flows as well as by
expectations of
changes
in monetary flows caused by
changes in GDP growth,
inflation, interest
rates,
budget
and trade deficits or surpluses, large
cross-border M&A deals and
other
macroeconomic
conditions. Major news is
released publicly, often on
scheduled dates; so
many
people have access to the
same news at the same
time. However, the large
banks have
an
important advantage; they can
see their customers' order
flow.
Currencies
are traded against one another. Each pair
of currencies thus constitutes
an
individual
product and is traditionally noted
XXX/YYY, where YYY is the ISO
4217
international
three-letter code of the
currency into which the
price of one unit of XXX is
expressed.
For instance, EUR/USD is the
price of the Euro expressed
in US dollars, as in 1
Euro
= 1.3045 dollar. Out of
convention, the first
currency in the pair, the
base currency,
was
the stronger currency at the
creation of the pair. The
second currency, counter
currency,
was
the weaker currency at the
creation of the pair.
The
factors affecting XXX will affect
both XXX/YYY and XXX/ZZZ. This
causes positive
currency
correlation between XXX/YYY and
XXX/ZZZ.
On
the spot market, according to
the BIS study, the
most heavily traded products
were:
EUR/USD:
28 %
·
USD/JPY:
18 %
·
GBP/USD
(also called sterling
or
cable):
14 %
·
And
the US currency was involved in
88.7% of transactions, followed by
the Euro (37.2%),
the
yen (20.3%), and the
sterling (16.9%). Note that
volume percentages should
add up to
200%:
100% for all the
sellers and 100% for all
the buyers.
Although
trading in the Euro has
grown considerably since the
currency's creation in
January
1999, the foreign exchange
market is thus far still
largely dollar-centered.
For
instance,
trading the Euro versus a
non-European currency ZZZ will usually
involve two
112
Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
trades:
EUR/USD and USD/ZZZ. The
exception to this is EUR/JPY,
which is an
established
traded currency pair in the
interbank spot market.
Exchange
Traded Fund
Exchange-traded
funds (or ETFs) are
Open Ended investment companies that can
be traded
at
any time throughout the
course of the day. Typically,
ETFs try to replicate a
stock market
index
such as the S&P 500 (e.g.
SPY), but recently they
are now replicating
investments in
the
currency markets with the
ETF increasing in value when
the US Dollar weakness
versus
a
specific Currency, such as
the Euro. Certain of these
funds track the price
movements of
world
currencies versus the US
Dollar, and increase in value
directly counter to the
US
Dollar,
allowing for speculation in
the US Dollar for US and US
Dollar denominated
investors
and speculators.
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