nep-ifn New Economics Papers
on International Finance
Issue of 2019‒08‒26
two papers chosen by
Vimal Balasubramaniam
University of Oxford

  1. Exchange Rate Reconnect By Lilley, Andrew; Maggiori, Matteo; Neiman, Brent; Schreger, Jesse
  2. Forward-Looking Policy Rules and Currency Premia By Filippou, Ilias; Taylor, Mark P

  1. By: Lilley, Andrew; Maggiori, Matteo; Neiman, Brent; Schreger, Jesse
    Abstract: The failure to find fundamentals that co-move with exchange rates or forecasting models with even mild predictive power â?? facts broadly referred to as "exchange rate disconnect" â?? stands among the most disappointing, but robust, facts in all of international macroeconomics. In this paper, we demonstrate that U.S. purchases of foreign bonds, which did not co-move with exchange rates prior to 2007, have provided significant in-sample, and even some out-of-sample, explanatory power for currencies since then. We show that several proxies for global risk factors also start to co-move strongly with the dollar and with U.S. purchases of foreign bonds around 2007, suggesting that risk plays a key role in this finding. We use security-level data on U.S. portfolios to demonstrate that the reconnect of U.S. foreign bond purchases to exchange rates is largely driven by investment in dollar-denominated assets rather than by foreign currency exposure alone. Our results support the narrative emerging from an active recent literature that the US dollar's role as an international and safe-haven currency has surged since the global financial crisis.
    Date: 2019–07
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cpr:ceprdp:13869&r=all
  2. By: Filippou, Ilias; Taylor, Mark P
    Abstract: We evaluate the cross-sectional predictive ability of a forward-looking monetary policy reaction function, or Taylor rule, in both statistical and economic terms. We find that investors require a premium for holding currency portfolios with high implied interest rates while currency portfolios with low implied rates offer negative currency excess returns. Our forward-looking Taylor rule signals are orthogonal to current nominal interest rates and disconnected from carry trade portfolios and other currency investment strategies. The profitability of the Taylor rule portfolio spread is mainly driven by inflation forecasts rather than the output gap and is robust to data snooping and a wide range of robustness checks.
    Keywords: currency risk premium; data snooping bias; foreign exchange; Taylor rules
    JEL: F31 G11 G15
    Date: 2019–07
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cpr:ceprdp:13835&r=all

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