Financial Exchange Rates and International Currency Exposures

Working Paper: NBER ID: w13433

Authors: Philip Lane; Jay C. Shambaugh

Abstract: Our goal in this project is to gain a better empirical understanding of the international financial implications of currency movements. To this end, we construct a database of international currency exposures for a large panel of countries over 1990-2004. We show that trade-weighted exchange rate indices are insufficient to understand the financial impact of currency movements. Further, we demonstrate that many developing countries hold short foreign-currency positions, leaving them open to negative valuation effects when the domestic currency depreciates. However, we also show that many of these countries have substantially reduced their foreign currency exposure over the last decade. Last, we show that our currency measure has high explanatory power for the valuation term in net foreign asset dynamics: exchange rate valuation shocks are sizable, not quickly reversed and may entail substantial wealth shocks.

Keywords: currency movements; financial implications; international currency exposures

JEL Codes: F31; F32


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
trade-weighted exchange rate indices (F31)understanding the financial impact of currency movements (F31)
short foreign-currency positions (F31)negative valuation effects (Q51)
time (last decade) (C41)reduction in foreign currency exposure (F31)
newly constructed currency measure (E42)explanatory power for the valuation term in net foreign asset dynamics (F31)
exchange rate valuation shocks (F31)substantial wealth shocks (G59)
wealth effects associated with exchange rate changes (F31)sizable share of overall valuation shocks (G19)

Back to index