An Assessment of the Impact of Japanese Foreign Exchange Intervention


Book Description

"We analyze the short-term price impact of Japanese foreign exchange intervention operations between 1991 and 2004, using official data from Japan's Ministry of Finance. Over the period as a whole, we find some evidence of a modest against the wind effect, but interventions do not have value as a forecast that the exchange rate will move in a direction consistent with the operations. Interventions conducted between 1995 and 2002, which were large and infrequent, met with a much higher degree of success. For the most recent episode of intervention, in 2003 and 2004, despite the record size and frequency of the overall episode, it is difficult to statistically distinguish the pattern of exchange rate movements on intervention days from that of all the days in that particular subperiod, showing little effectiveness. Still, while the evidence of Japanese intervention effectiveness is modest overall, it appears to be stronger than that found using similar techniques for U.S. intervention operations conducted in the 1980s and 1990s"--Federal Reserve Board web site.




An Assessment of the Impact of Japanese Foreign Exchange Intervention


Book Description

We analyze the short-term price impact of Japanese foreign exchange intervention operations between 1991 and 2004, using official data from Japan's Ministry of Finance. Over the period as a whole, we find some evidence of a modest against the wind effect, but interventions do not have value as a forecast that the exchange rate will move in a direction consistent with the operations. Interventions conducted between 1995 and 2002, which were large and infrequent, met with a much higher degree of success. For the most recent episode of intervention, in 2003 and 2004, despite the record size and frequency of the overall episode, it is difficult to statistically distinguish the pattern of exchange rate movements on intervention days from that of all the days in that particular subperiod, showing little effectiveness. Still, while the evidence of Japanese intervention effectiveness is modest overall, it appears to be stronger than that found using similar techniques for U.S. intervention operations conducted in the 1980s and 1990s.










Observations on U.S., Japanese, and German Forex Interventions, 1973-2004


Book Description

This book documents, observes, and models the 'trial and error' period following Bretton Woods Collapse of Foreign Exchange Interventions by the G-3 Advanced Economies. The book serves as a narration and analytical reader for Exchange Rate Intervention Economics for this period of 1973 to 2004.




New Assessment of the Japanese Foreign Exchange Intervention


Book Description

I propose a new variable to assess the effect of the Japanese foreign exchange (FX) intervention. The variable is the probability of an FX rate reaching one threshold before the other threshold is reached. Importantly, the probability depends on not only the level but also the trend and volatility of a current FX rate. When an intervention changes the probability into its intending direction, the intervention is effective. The notable feature of the probability is to consider both the level and volatility of an FX rate comprehensively, on those previous literature examine the effect of FX intervention separately.I process the two analysis; time series and event study one. The former uses all the time series data, in which sporadic and infrequent interventions are observed. The latter uses data only from around periods of intervention.In the time series analysis, I regresses the probability on the amounts of FX intervention. My regression result indicates that the intervention can cause a desired change in the probability.Event study processes the nearest-neighbors matching analysis. In order to implement that analysis, I compares the probability changes of the pairs. Each pair consists of two nearest-neighbors in terms of equivalent probability, and one is followed by next day's intervention and the other is not. I expect that the former neighbor shows a desired change in the probability after the intervention, and that change is larger than that of the other neighbor. The result of the matching analysis also supports the effectiveness of the Japanese intervention although the regression and matching results are against the effectiveness in some sub-samples.




Currency Interventions, Fluctuations and Economic Issues


Book Description

A currency is a unit of exchange, facilitating the transfer of goods and services. It is one form of money, where money is anything that serves as a medium of exchange, a store of value, and a standard of value. A currency zone is a country or region in which a specific currency is the dominant medium of exchange. To facilitate trade between currency zones, there are exchange rates, which are the prices at which currencies (and the goods and services of individual currency zones) can be exchanged against each other. Currencies can be classified as either floating currencies or fixed currencies based on their exchange rate regime. In common usage, currency sometimes refers to only paper money, as in coins and currency, but this is misleading. Coins and paper money are both forms of currency. In most cases, each country has monopoly control over the supply and production of its own currency. Member countries of the European Union's Economic and Monetary Union are a notable exception to this rule, as they have c




The Effects of Japanese Foreign Exchange Intervention GARCH Estimation and Change Point Detection


Book Description

In this paper we test for the short-term impact of foreign exchange intervention on both the level of the yen/dollar exchange rate and the volatility in the yen/dollar markets. Using newly released data on Japanese foreign exchange intervention, our global GARCH estimation suggests that Japanese foreign exchange interventions between 1991 and 2002 had the intended effect on the same day, but at the cost of higher exchange rate volatility. Testing for the robustness of this finding we show that the results are highly dependent on the time period. From 1991 to 1998 Japan's official currency purchases were unsuccessful and coincided with increased exchange rate volatility. Since 1999 official Japanese currency purchases seem to have had the intended short-term effect while exchange rate volatility is lower. To this end, the paper provides evidence for successful foreign exchange intervention on the same day in Japan's liquidity trap where the borderline between sterilized and unsterilized foreign exchange intervention became blurred.




Foreign-Exchange Intervention Strategies and Market Expectations


Book Description

This study extends the traditional set of central bank's interventions to include official announcements in order to provide empirical evidence on two pivotal questions: i) are FX authorities able to influence market expectations with different instruments? ii) how should interventions be designed to have the greatest impact? Using Japanese data over 1992-2004 and an event-study approach, we estimate the effect of different strategies on the USD/JPY exchange rate risk neutral density. Overall, transparent policies (public and oral interventions) appear to be the most effective. Moreover, the effect is greater when policies involve a financial cost (risk) suggesting that simple announcements can only be deemed as an imperfect substitute for actual interventions.