FOREIGN CURRENCY SPECULATION An interest parity approach to investigate the opportunities for making speculative profits in the foreign exchange market
Abstract
The foreign exchange market is a very large and liquid market all over the world. Daily trades in foreign exchange amount to enormous sums
that are larger than the annual GDP of several countries. The question remains of whether a market of this size and trading volume is efficient.
According to the theory of interest parity, it should not be possible to achieve speculative profits by engaging in carrying trades between different currencies since returns on deposits should be equal in all currencies. However, there are deviations from interest parity since the theory does not always hold. This creates opportunities for making speculative profits. This thesis tests whether it is possible to make speculative profits in the foreign exchange market through so called carrying trades. We test
to what extent interest parity holds between several currencies with large interest differentials over different maturities. The conclusion is that interest parity does not hold well for several currency combinations. Specific patterns were found for certain currencies. The Japanese yen, which is a low interest rate currency, does not appreciate as much as indicated by the interest differential relative to all currencies tested. The Indonesian rupiah, which is a high interest rate currency, does not depreciate by as much as it should relative to most of the currencies tested.
Degree
Student essay
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2004Author
Örnberg, Johan
Stenström, Peter
Keywords
Interest parity
uncovered interest parity
carry trading
exchange rates
interest rates
foreign currency speculation
international finance
international monetary economics
forecasting.
ISSN
1403-85117
Series/Report no.
Masters Thesis, nr 2003:41
Language
en