Global spillovers: Managing capital flows and forex reserves

Similar documents
Capital Flow Management with Multiple Instruments

Capital Flow Management with Multiple Instruments

Introduction to Masala Bonds. B S Rathi Director Sumedha Fiscal Services Ltd /

The policy puzzles of foreign currency borrowing by Indian firms

Monetary Easing and Financial Instability

7. Foreign Investments in India

Relaxation of RBI norms on External Commercial Borrowings

FDI, FII and International Financial Management. CA Final Strategic Financial Management, Paper 2 Chapter 11 CA Tarun Mahajan

2018 The year of promise

India s Experience with Capital Flow Management

Risk Taking and Interest Rates: Evidence from Decades in the Global Syndicated Loan Market

Foreign Exchange, Money Markets and Derivatives

CBRT Policy Mix. Devrim Yavuz Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey. April Jakarta

RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN ECB BCAS FEMA STUDY CIRCLE

Turkey s Experience with Macroprudential Policy

RESERVE BANK OF INDIA Foreign Exchange Department Central Office Mumbai

Sovereign Debt Managers Forum

Global Financial Crisis The Indian Policy Response. Usha Thorat, Director, CAFRAL

RUPEE DENOMINATED BOND OVERSEAS

UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF LOLR FACILITIES: THE CASE OF ILLIQUID LEVERAGE FOURTEENTH JACQUES POLAK CONFERENCE, IMF, NOVEMBER

L-3: BALANCE OF PAYMENT CRISES IRINA BUNDA MACROECONOMIC POLICIES IN TIMES OF HIGH CAPITAL MOBILITY VIENNA, MARCH 21 25, 2016

Confronting the Global Crisis in Latin America: What is the Outlook? Coordinators

RBI in Defence of INR

The Macroprudential Role of International Reserves

In Rs. Lakh Crore Spread (%) Nov-16 Feb-17 May-17 Aug-17 Nov-17 Feb-18 May-18

Interest Rates & Credit Derivatives

Macro-Insurance. How can emerging markets be aided in responding to shocks as smoothly as Australia does?

India s Response to the Global Financial Crisis and Current Issues in Deposit Insurance

Presentation. Managing Capital Flows in Asia and the Pacific: the case of Korea

Usha Thorat: Impact of global financial crisis on Reserve Bank of India (RBI) as a national regulator

Central Bank Policy Mix: Reserve Bank of India s Experience. Anand Prakash Reserve Bank of India April 11, 2018

Foreign Portfolio Investments

HSBC Global Asset Management, India Creating Wealth through Asset Allocation. March 2018

GDP-linked securities

The Fertile Soil of Corporate Bond Market

Product Note on: Masala Bonds

Slides for International Finance Financial Globalization (KOM 21)

Monetary Easing and Financial Instability

Effects Of Monetary Policies On Asset Prices In India

THE INSURANCE SECTOR TRENDS AND SYSTEMIC RISK IMPLICATIONS

Recent Experiences with Regulating Capital Flows in India. T. Sabri Öncü Centre for Advanced Financial Research and Learning India

Impact of Rupee- Dollar Fluctuations on Indian Economy: Challenges for Rbi & Indian Government

EXTERNAL COMMERCIAL BORROWINGS BY INDIAN COMPANIES MADE EASY

CAIIB Risk Management Module C TREASURY MANAGEMENT

Inputs on RBI s draft framework for according approval to Indian residents to invest in overseas tech funds

RBI liberalises ECB norms

Regulatory Framework for IFSC in India: The experience of GIFT IFSC. by Mr. Dipesh Shah Head IFSC & Strategy GIFT IFSC. April 05, 2017 at NIPFP

MONTHLY UPDATE NOVEMBER 2018

FII Flows in Indian Equity Markets: Boon or Curse?

Bond Market Development in Emerging East Asia

A Proposal for the Resolution of Systemically Important Assets and Liabilities: The Case of the Repo Market

WHAT'S NEW. International Developments. U.S. GDP expanded an annualized 0.50% in the first quarter of 2016, the slowest pace in two years.

Markets at a Glance. India Q2 CY For Distributors use only

Comments: Monetary Policy in a Globalized Economy by Helene Rey

International Spillovers and Local Credit Cycles

The challenges of European banking sector reform. José Manuel González-Páramo

Macroprudential frameworks, implementation, and relationship with other policies

Solved questions on Indian capital market

Introduction The magnitude and gyrations of capital flows becoming the primary determinant of exchange rate movements on a day-to-day basis for most E

CERTIFICATE COURSE ON FOREIGN EXCHANGE & TREASURY MANAGEMENT

The Federal Reserve in the 21st Century Financial Stability Policies

FIXED INCOME UPDATE 1

Capital flows and macroprudential policies a multilateral assessment of effectiveness and externalities

Julio Velarde Governor Central Reserve Bank of Peru Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia October 2011

Headline Verdana Bold. Union Budget 2018 Understanding the impact on Foreign Portfolio Investors

CIRCULAR. Sub: Review of Investment by Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPI) in Debt

Rupee can gain against Euro But, Rupee can fall against Emerging Currencies Can test 59-58, but can rebound towards

International Capital Market

Monetary policy challenges posed by global liquidity

Multi-Dimensional Monetary Policy

Joshua Aizenman (with Yi Sun) UCSC and the NBER; UCSC. Global Dimensions of the Financial Crisis FRB of New York June 3, 2010

Trilemmas and Tradeoffs Living with Financial Globalization

Trading in India. The Status Quo. Anshuman Jaswal Senior Analyst, Celent

Dr. Lee Jang Yung Senior Deputy Governor Financial Supervisory Service Korea

Dollar Funding of Global banks and Regulatory Reforms: Evidence from the Impact of Monetary Policy Divergence

Are BRIC countries currencies to play. a dominant role in the system? A Brazilian perception

Discussion of Jeffrey Frankel s Systematic Managed Floating. by Assaf Razin. The 4th Asian Monetary Policy Forum, Singapore, 26 May, 2017

Discussion Paper on Margin Requirements for non-centrally Cleared Derivatives

Monetary Policy Divergence and Global Financial Stability: From the Perspective of Demand and Supply of Safe Assets

Financial Markets and Institutions Final study guide Jon Faust Spring The final will be a 2 hour exam.

Equity & Debt Strategy

Equity Savings Fund - Series1

Foreign Currency Borrowing by Indian Firms: Towards a New Policy Framework

Market Insight Economy and Asset Classes December Oil Prices Downtrending: The Real Global Economic Stimulus

NISM-Series-I: Currency Derivatives Certification Examination

GURUJI24.COM EXPOSURES NORMS. Exposure

Capital Flows in the Euro Area: Some lessons from the last boom-bust cycle. Angel Gavilan, Martin Hillebrand December 2017

Indonesia: Changing patterns of financial intermediation and their implications for central bank policy

ECOWRAP MARKETS AWAIT NEXT STEPS. Be the Bank of Choice for a Transforming India SEPTEMBER 18, 2018 ISSUE NO: 47, FY19 SBI ECOWRAP

CHAPTER 5 DETERMINANTS OF FORWARD PREMIA INTERPRETATION OF. Only those who see the invisible can do the impossible Anonymous

PUBLIC DEBT MANAGEMENT QUARTERLY REPORT JANUARY-MARCH 2018

EXTERNAL COMMERCIAL BORROWINGS. RAJESH THAKKAR 17 February 2018 ICSI WIRC Training

Monetary policy normalization in the euro area

Monetary Policy in India

SALIENT FEATURES OF SEBI (FOREIGN PORTFOLIO INVESTORS) REGULATIONS, 2014

Bank Indonesia s Experience on Policy Mix

03/03/2015. Investing in ideas Achieving genuine diversification. Agenda. Diversification dilemma. Investing in ideas.

If the Fed sneezes, who gets a cold?

José Darío Uribe E. Governor central bank of colombia October 13, 2011

Public Debt Management

Transcription:

Global spillovers: Managing capital flows and forex reserves Viral Acharya (based on Capital flow management with multiple instruments w/ Arvind Krishnamurthy) NSE NYU Conference on Indian Financial Markets, 2017 December 14, 2017 The views expressed are entirely those of the authors and do not in any way reflect the views of the Reserve Bank of India. 1

Outline Motivation Sudden stops and reversals -> Forex reserves Rey (2013), Obstfeld, Shambaugh and Taylor (2010). A measure of external sector resilience (Foreign-reserves Short-term external debt or flows)/gdp Reserves and capital controls are complements De Gregorio (2010), Ostry et al. (2010), Aizenmann (2011), Jeanne and Ranciere (2011), Aizenman and Marion (2013), Key insights: Foreign reserves do not work absent macro-pru/capital controls Reserves undone by short-term external debt; can make things worse! Macro-prudential comes first; makes reserves effective FPI flows in domestic debt versus external debt Tradeoff: Lower external issuance costs versus greater vulnerability Arbitrage -> Need to tax both foreign debt and FPI in domestic debt Greater the reliance on external debt, greater the needed reserves Macro-prudential measures to deal with the tradeoff Size limits, maturity of investors and investments, rationing the risky. 2

SUDDEN STOPS AND REVERSALS: THE TAPER TANTRUM 3

Monetary easing->em capital flows Taper Tantrum (May-June 2013) Source: Emerging Market Volatility Lessons from the Taper Tantrum, IMF Staff Discussion Note, September 2014 4

QE, Taper Tantrum, EM MF Flows Source: Market Tantrums and Monetary Policy by Feroli, Kashyap, Schoenholtz and Shin (Feb 2014) 5

TAPER TANTRUM AND INDIA 6

Volatility of FPI flows- Surge & Stop Taper tantrum Financial Crisis Source: RBI Data for 2017-18 updated till July 2017 7

Taper Tantrum and Exchange rate Source: Bloomberg and RBI 8

MEASURING RESILIENCE 9

A measure of external resilience International or external-sector liquidity Country has issued net short-term (ST) debt claims to foreign investors In the aggregate, should include unhedged foreign exposures and all reversible hot money flows If foreigners run, does the country have adequate FX reserves? Liquidity i = FX Reserves i ST Ext Debt i GDP i Simply looking at reserves is inadequate and a potentially misleading indicator of vulnerability Akin to Guidotti-Greenspan (1999) rule 10

Foreign reserves and short-term debt for EMs tend to rise together Source: IMF (in trillion USD), see also Carstens (2016) 11

Trend in Forex Reserves for India USD Billion 425 400 375 350 325 300 275 250 225 200 175 150 125 100 75 50 Source: RBI 12

USD billion 110 Movement in Short term External debt 26.0 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 24.0 22.0 20.0 18.0 16.0 14.0 12.0 10 Mar-05 Mar-06 Mar-07 Mar-08 Mar-09 Mar-10 Mar-11 Mar-12 Mar-13 Mar-14 Mar-15 Mar-16 Mar-17 10.0 Short-term debt Short term Debt as % of Total Debt (RHS) Source: INDIA S EXTERNAL DEBT, A Status Report, 2016-17 by Government of India 13

USD billion USD billion (Reserves Short-term external debt)/gdp Reserves/Short-term External Debt 300 0.25 400 350 8 250 0.20 300 200 0.15 250 6 150 100 0.10 200 150 4 50 0.05 100 50 2 0 0.00 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 0 Reserves-Short term external debt(usd bilion) (Reserves-Short term external debt)/gdp (RHS) Reserves Short term external debt Reserves/Short term external debt(rhs) Source: INDIA S EXTERNAL DEBT, A Status Report, 2016-17 by Government of India 14

Does the measure work more broadly? Cross-country outcomes during the taper tantrum explained by liquidity Asset price changes from June 13 to Oct 17 15

Source: IMF 16

Does the measure work more broadly? Cross-country outcomes against global risk factors also explained by liquidity Global factor: the first principal component of the time series of 10 year US Treasury yields (Rey, 2013) VIX (Rey, 2013) S&P500 stock return Return on the US dollar basket index Return on the commodity price index 17

18

A MODEL OF RESERVES AND CAPITAL CONTROLS 19

Sketch of the model Caballero-Krishnamurthy (2001), Caballero-Simsek (2016). Three dates: 0, 1, 2 Domestic borrower, foreign lender, central bank Representative firm (bank or multinational or exporter) takes on liability L from foreign lender in foreign currency Invests domestically at normal-time exchange rate (=1) Liability is short-term, due at t=1; cash flows at t=2 Retrenchment risk (sudden stop/reversal) w.p. p In case of retrenchment, the firm liquidates collateral L domestically, converts to foreign currency at rate e < 1 Incurs liquidation costs to meet the shortfall of L (1 e) Central bank has reserves X that are used to act as buyer of last resort of domestic currency in the retrenchment state e = X / L ; Bankruptcy cost suffered = f (L X) 20

Fire-sale externality Each firm is competitive; so does not internalize the impact of its short-term external liability on the price e Price e increases in reserves X and decreases in aggregate short-term external debt L Privately optimal L Declines in p, the likelihood of sudden stop Increases as anticipated e increases, undoing the reserves ( moral hazard channel of reserves) Socially optimal L takes into account the cost of reserves and internalizes the fire-sale externality Reserves are a form of bailout Beyond a point, less reserves can be more! 21

Can the central bank do better? Central bank can tax short-term external debt to get firms to internalize the cost of reserves and the fire-sale externality (capital controls, macro-pru limits) In the extremis, an omniscient central bank can just limit L to the right level More realistically, it has to charge a Pigouvian tax that increases in the likelihood of the retrenchment state and liquidation / bankruptcy costs Macro-prudential comes first; makes the reserves work! Macro-pru limits the moral hazard channel of reserves Make larger reserves effective as a defense against stops Jeanne and Korinek (2010), Jeanne (2016) 22

Heterogeneity among firms Sets of firms; set i faces liquidation in the retrenchment state w.p. p_i Lower p_i captures the relative safety of a firm: larger, more stable, export-oriented firms Now, e = X / p_i L_i di Riskier (safer) firms contribute more to the fire-sale externality and over (under) borrow Pigouvian taxation: 23

Foreign currency vs local currency debt Suppose now that foreigners can also invest in domestic currency debt (locally or abroad) Assume foreign currency debt is cheaper (by s) due to accommodative policies abroad or lack of ease for foreigners in bankruptcy Foreigners leave domestic markets too in retrenchment state, not rolling over domestic debt (e.g., FPI outflow) Twin crisis : Kaminsky-Reinhart (1996), Chang-Velasco (2001) FPI s charge ex ante for the fx risk they bear: p (1 e) In retrenchment state: e = X / (L_foreign + L_domestic) Incentive to issue abroad due to cheaper costs ( carry ) Carry trade ignores the fire-sale externality, as before 24

What can the central bank do? As before, to make the reserves effective, the central bank can tax issuance of short-term external debt However, firms have two markets to undo the central bank reserves If tax on foreign currency debt is high, then firms switch to domestic currency debt in spite of higher cost Hence, central bank has to tax both margins of arbitrage This way, overall short-term external debt can be kept limited and reserves made to work in sudden stops To manage global spillovers, macro-pru on foreign flows into both foreign-currency and domesticcurrency debt complement the central bank s reserves 25

MANAGING CAPITAL FLOWS: THE RBI APPROACH 26

I. Caps on external debt Three primary types of non-government debt Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) in domestic currency debt (both Government of India securities at center and state level, as well as corporate bonds) External Commercial Borrowings (ECB) in foreign currency, typically loans to Indian corporations Rupee Denominated Bonds (RDB) or Masala bonds issued overseas, typically listed on LSE Current limits: FPI G-sec: $39 bln; SDL: $6 bln; Corporate: $36 bln ECB + Masala bonds: $130 bln 27

II. Limits by investor horizon FPI limits by Long Term vs General investors: Long Term includes Insurance firms, Endowments and Pension Funds, Sovereign Wealth Funds, Central Banks, and Multilateral Agencies 28

II. Limits by investor horizon (cont d) FPI limits by Long Term versus General investors: Long Term includes Insurance firms, Endowments and Pension Funds, Sovereign Wealth Funds, Central Banks, and Multilateral Agencies FPI restrictions in the past also included Sub-limits for 100% debt funds as against minimum 70:30 equity-debt investment ratio funds. Minimum lock-in periods of up to three years Counter to our theoretical analysis, long-term investors were not allowed by India to be eligible lenders to ECBs until 2015! Domestic banks not allowed to refinance ECBs 29

III. Limits on maturity of investments Presently, FPIs are disallowed from investing in liquid short-term money-market instruments such Treasury bills or commercial paper (CP). Prior to the taper tantrum, there was a carve-out for FPI investments in Treasury Bills and CP. 30

III. Limits on investment maturity (cont d) Since the taper tantrum Residual maturity restrictions of investments by FPIs in debt holdings of minimum three years of maturity at origination or purchase. In ECBs, borrower can take on debt up to $50 million with minimum average maturity (MAM) of 3 years; or up to $50 million if the maturity is 5 years Foreign currency denominated under the so-called Track-I of ECB, or INR denominated under Track-III of ECB. In contrast, no borrowing limits within the overall ECB limit is imposed for borrowings meeting a minimum average maturity of 10 years Foreign currency denominated borrowing under Track-II. 31

IV. Rationing high-liquidity demanders Only relatively high credit quality borrowers can tap into ECBs: Coupon or all-in-cost ceilings by debt issue Imposing sub-limits on investments in risky instruments such as unlisted corporate bonds and security receipts (a form of distressed asset resolution instrument) Ruling out excessive correlated liquidations by imposing investment sub-limits by sector. These restrictions limit ECBs to high-rated borrowers, as suggested by our model. On the other hand, this form of taxation does not exist for domestic debt issuances purchased by the FPIs 32

33

V. Harmonizing ECB and Masala Bonds Masala Bonds envisioned to provide wider access for Indian entities to international debt markets without currency risk Guidelines were more relaxed than ECB norms: No restrictions on investors; any corporate eligible to issue; no cost ceiling Masala Bonds route gained popularity in the past year as arbitrage over ECB and FPI in domestic corporate bonds Used by related parties to circumvent ECB/FDI; Rates not linked to market Used to camouflage ECBs Recent Measures to address macro-prudential concerns: June 2017: Restrictions on related party transactions All-in-costs ceilings of G-Sec + 300 bps imposed Minimum tenor which was originally 5 years aligned to ECB Upto USD 50 mn: 3 years; above USD 50 mn: 5 years 34

Some food for thought Potential arbitrage of capital controls between ECB and FPI in debt markets Should there be all-in-cost ceilings on domestic debt FPI s can invest in? Greater linking of FPI and ECB + Masala bond caps to the extent of reserves Conversely, reserves accumulation policy contingent on the external short-term debt Unclear that caps should be linked to the underlying market-size, as in GSEC and SDL case Also caps should be on stocks, rather than flows Shouldn t the limits on Long-term investors be larger than for General investors? 35

USD billion Is there arbitrage across FPI vs ECB? Movement in O/S debt stock 250 200 150 100 50 0 Source: RBI, NSDL and SEBI ECB Masala Bonds FPI investment in Debt (upto 25th October ) Total Debt 36