Leaning-against-the-wind intervention and the “carry-trade” view of the cost of reserves
Metadatos:
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es:
Levy Yeyati, Eduardo
Gómez, Juan Francisco
Fecha:
2022Resumen
We estimate, for a sample of emerging economies, the quasi-fiscal costs of sterilized foreign exchange interventions as the P&L of an inverse carry trade. We show that
these costs can be substantial when intervention has a neo-mercantilist motive (preserving an undervalued currency) or a stabilization motive (appreciating the
exchange rate as a nominal anchor), but are rather small when interventions follow a
countercyclical, leaning-against-the-wind (LAW) pattern to contain exchange rate
volatility. We document that under LAW, central banks outperform a constant size carry trade, as they additionally benefit from buying against cyclical deviations, and
that the cost of reserves under the carry-trade view is generally lower than the one obtained from the credit-risk view (which equals the marginal cost to the country´s sovereign spread).
Este Documento de Trabajo fue posteriormente publicado como artículo en Levy-Yeyati, E., Gómez, J.F. Leaning-Against-the-Wind Intervention and the “Carry-Trade” View of the Cost of Reserves. Open Econ Rev 33, 853–877 (2022).
URI:
https://repositorio.utdt.edu/handle/20.500.13098/13100https://doi.org/10.1007/s11079-022-09689-z