Exchange rates and monetary policy frameworks in emerging market economies

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Exchange rates and monetary policy frameworks in emerging market economies Hyun Song Shin* Bank for International Settlements ECB conference on monetary policy: bridging science and practice Frankfurt, 29 October 2018 * The views expressed here are mine, not necessarily those of the Bank for International Settlements.

Two structural developments since 1990s EME crises Dollar intermediation has shifted from banks to the bond market Local currency sovereign bond markets have matured EMEs better placed to meet challenges But have not insulated them completely from global conditions

From banks to bond markets 3

Non-resident holdings of local currency sovereign bonds 40 30 20 10 0 4 Peru South Africa Indonesia Mexico Poland Russia Malaysia Colombia Egypt Turkey Romania Hungary Thailand Brazil Chile Lithuania Latvia Philippines India China Bulgaria Ukraine 2016 Q4 2017 Q4 Source: World Bank

Local currency bonds insulate monetary policy from global conditions only imperfectly Inflow phase Currency appreciation Subdued inflation Strong credit-fueled activity Outflow phase Currency depreciation Pass-through to inflation Weak activity 5

Two duration measures Duration = / Compare duration measures with: Percentage return in local currency terms Percentage return in dollar terms 6

Percentage return 0 Yield change 7

EME bond fund local currency returns and USD returns Sources: EPFR; JPMorgan Chase; Hofmann, Shim and Shin (2017) 8

EME bond fund local currency returns and USD returns When local currency bond yields fall, gains to dollar-based investors magnified by EME currency appreciation Sources: EPFR; JPMorgan Chase; Hofmann, Shim and Shin (2017) 9

EME bond fund local currency returns and USD returns When local currency bond yields rise, losses to dollar-based investors magnified by EME currency depreciation Sources: EPFR; JPMorgan Chase; Hofmann, Shim and Shin (2017) 10

EMEs local currency sovereign bonds performance 1, January 2013 October 2018 Indonesia Brazil y = -0.09-6.6x where R 2 = 0.60 y = -0.01-4.52x where R 2 = 0.88 10 0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 Change in yield, in percentage points US dollar return 5 0 5 Return, in percent y = -0.11-8.52x where R 2 = 0.66 y = 0.04-4.34x where R 2 = 0.93 10 0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 Change in yield, in percentage points US dollar return 5 0 5 Return, in percent 1 Total return on bonds denominated in local currency as weekly change in JPMorgan GBI-EM principal return index in local currency and US dollar. Sources: JPMorgan Chase; BIS calculations. 11

EMEs local currency sovereign bonds performance 1, January 2013 October 2018 Mexico South Africa y = -0.06-12.4x where R 2 = 0.58 y = -0.01-5.05x where R 2 = 0.88 10 0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 Change in yield, in percentage points Local currency return 5 0 5 Return, in percent y = -0.02-12.8x where R 2 = 0.70 y = 0.03-4.59x where R 2 = 0.94 10 0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 Change in yield, in percentage points US dollar return 5 0 5 Return, in percent 1 Total return on bonds denominated in local currency as weekly change in JPMorgan GBI-EM principal return index in local currency and US dollar. Sources: JPMorgan Chase; BIS calculations. 12

Advanced economies sovereign bond indices 1, January 2013 October 2018 France y = -0.06-2.67x where R 2 = 0.02 y = -0.03-5.41x where R 2 = 0.96 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 Change in yield, in percentage points Local currency return 2 0 2 4 Return, in percent Sweden y = -0.12-1.91x where R 2 = 0.01 y = -0.03-5.09x where R 2 = 0.94 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 Change in yield, in percentage points US dollar return 2 0 2 4 6 Return, in percent 1 GBI Global Country 5 to 7 year maturity indices for the selected economies. Sources: JPMorgan Chase; BIS calculations. 13

Yields of local currency EM government bonds and the exchange rates 1 Yields 2 Volatility of yields 3 The exchange rate 4 Per cent 2010=100 1 All three graphs show the simple average of Brazil, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, the Philippines, Poland and South Africa. The black vertical lines correspond to 15 April 2018. 2 Yields on 5-year local currency bonds. 3 180-day moving standard deviation of daily changes in yields. 4 In dollars per unit of local currency. Sources: Bloomberg; national data; BIS calculations. 14

Du-Schreger spread Du and Schreger (JF 2015) Consider a dollar-based investor Swap dollars into pesos Invest in peso sovereign bonds Du-Schreger spread = peso bond yield on swapped basis same maturity US treasury yield Du-Schreger spread is risk premium on local currency sovereign bond for a dollar-based investor 15

Du-Schreger spreads Sources: Bloomberg; Du and Schreger (2016). 16

Panel regression: Du-Schreger (2015) spread Hofmann, Shim and Shin (2016): monthly data, 14 EMEs 17

Panel regression: Cross-currency swap rate. 18

Exchange rates and credit conditions Conventionally, exchange rates enter through Exchange rate pass-through to inflation Net exports Financial channel of exchange rates Operates through financial intermediaries Appreciation loosens domestic credit conditions 19

Risk-taking channel through credit supply Consider global lender with diversified portfolio of dollar credits to borrowers around the world Some borrowers face currency mismatch or otherwise benefit from weaker dollar (eg, oil firm) Dollar depreciation against whole basket implies: Reduction in credit risk for individual borrowers (fall in ε) Reduced tail risk for diversified loan portfolio Reduced Value-at-Risk Increased lending capacity given economic capital Broad dollar is proxy for dollar-debt weighted index of the dollar exchange rate. 20

Annual growth rates of dollar loans and bonds together with broad USD index Annual growth in % 20 10 0 10 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 USD-denominated cross-border bank lending to non-us residents 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 International US dollar bonds issued by EME non-financial corporations 1 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 20 2018 Broad USD index ( USD depreciation) Source: BIS locational banking statistics and nominal effective exchange rate indices. 21

Macroprudential features of FX intervention Hofmann, Shin, Villamizar-Villegas (2018) Stylised model analysing how sterilised FXI affects domestic credit Empirical analysis using unique high-frequency data for Colombia Recent literature on FX intervention Ghosh, Ostry and Qureshi (2017), Blanchard, Adler and Carvalho Filho (2015), Barbone Gonzalez, Khametshin, Peydro and Polo (2018) 22

Hofmann, Shin, Villamizar-Villegas (2018): Model Banks lend to local corporates and invest in local currency bonds; local corporates have dollar liabilities Exchange rate depreciation increases default risk and lowers lending to corporates Increase in the stock of local currency bonds crowds out lending to corporates Sterilised FX purchases dampen the impact of capital inflows Lean against currency appreciation (intervention leg) Absorb capital inflows (sterilisation leg) Effects are mutually reinforcing 23

Hofmann, Shin, Villamizar-Villegas (2018): Empirical analysis Time series and panel analysis in daily and weekly frequency using a unique high-frequency database for Colombia Local linear projection approach For identification Include large number of macro and bank controls Focus on period of discretionary FX interventions (2001-2010) - Results are similar but weaker over the full sample 24

Impact of FXI on new corporate loans 0.4 Daily 1.0 Weekly 0.2 0.0-0.2 0.5 0.0-0.4-0.5-0.6-1.0-0.8-1.0-1.5-1.2-2.0-1.4 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80-2.5 0 10 20 30 40 50 Sterilised FX intervention Capital inflows Size of impulse normalised to 100 million USD 25

Impact of FXI on exchange rate and capital flows (daily) 9.0 8.0 7.0 6.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 COP/USD 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 40.0 20.0 0.0-20.0-40.0-60.0-80.0-100.0-120.0-140.0 Capital flows 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Size of impulse normalised to 100 million USD 26

Impact of sterilisation operation on new corporate loans (weekly) 1.0 FXI 1.0 Sterilisation 0.5 0.5 0.0 0.0-0.5-0.5-1.0-1.0-1.5-1.5-2.0-2.0-2.5 0 10 20 30 40 50-2.5 0 10 20 30 40 50 FXI/Sterilisation operation Capital inflows Size of impulse normalised to 100 million USD 27

Impact of sterilisation operation on new corporate loans excl. intervention periods (weekly) 1.0 FXI 1.0 Sterilisation 0.5 0.5 0.0 0.0-0.5-0.5-1.0-1.0-1.5-1.5-2.0-2.0-2.5 0 10 20 30 40 50-2.5 0 10 20 30 40 50 FXI/Sterilisation operation Capital inflows Size of impulse normalised to 100 million USD 28

Impact of bond and repo sterilisation operations on new corporate loans 1.0 0.5 0.0-0.5-1.0-1.5-2.0-2.5-3.0-3.5 0 10 20 30 40 50 Bond sterilisation Repo sterilisation Size of impulse normalised to 100 million USD 29

Panel analysis Corroborates results of the time series analysis Shows that vulnerable banks (high provisions, low capitalisation, small size, high debt) reduce lending more strongly in response to sterilised FXI Bank lending channel of FX intervention 30

How far can reserve accumulation help? Reserve accumulation has prudential element Cools credit growth beyond crowding out effect (Hofmann, Shin and Villamizar (2018)) Add degree of freedom to monetary policy Relative merits by comparison to GFSN turns on effectiveness of leaning versus cleaning Main challenge is to distinguish from beggar thy neighbour currency depreciation for trade competitiveness Distinguish transitory from on-going intervention? Spillovers can be beneficial if financial channel is the relevant margin 31

Institutional development and monetary policy Change in pattern of dollar intermediation swaps run risk for duration risk Local currency sovereign bond markets gives some insulation from global conditions but not completely Institutional development to cushion the impact of currency moves Investor base whose performance is evaluated in local currency terms Currency of performance criterion (USD or LCY) matters