Market Drivers
Speculative Trading
Political, economic and technical events are the drivers of change in the foreign exchange markets. Having a broad understanding of these factors provides a practical means of forecasting foreign exchange rates. A forecast is static and not constant and therefore must be monitored and adjusted based on market conditions. Some key factors to consider are balance of payment, inflation rates, investor confidence and intervention in the foreign exchange market. Historically businesses purchased foreign currencies to settle trade-related transactions. Today there are many reasons to purchase foreign currencies. Investing in stock markets, the purchase of manufacturing facilities, holding the currency for interest income or speculation and the purchase of bonds are some of the ways investors utilize foreign currency. Markets are now impacted by market makers as they assume a high level of risk by buying and selling in sufficient quantities to affect market prices.Quality unisex jewelry |
Balance of Payments
Payments that flow between one country and all other countries determine its balance of payments. It is defined as the sum of the current account, the capital account and the change in official reserves. A current account is considered more short-term in nature while the other two are more long-term.Balance of Payments = Current Account + Capital Account + Change in Official Reserves
- The current account is the net of all goods and services between the United States and all other countries. The current account is generally the most volatile. The balance of trade between the United States and all other countries determines whether we are a net exporter or importer. Our need for inexpensive goods over what we could buy locally has caused us to become a net importer with a growing trade deficit. The deficit could be a severe problem if dollars were sold in mass quantities to the extent of lowering the value of the dollar itself.
- The capital account is the purchase of our currency or the repatriation of our currency for direct foreign investment in stocks, capital goods, land, etc. Capital goods are holdings other than cash and have to be converted back to cash in order to remove them from the country. This conversion process takes more time and is less volatile than having a current account.
- Official reserves are the holdings by foreign governments in the US dollar. These reserves can be used to stabilize their currency by selling off the dollars and purchasing their local currency, creating an artificial demand and driving the price of their currency up. The impact of this type of selling, which is generally short-term in nature, is done to prevent wide swings in the value of the local currency.
Inflation Rates
Inflation causes the value of local goods to become more expensive, impacting the ability of other countries to buy local goods and services. It makes products less competitive in a free-market economy. Time combined with market conditions will cause the re-establishment of purchasing power parity between two countries.Purchasing power parity (PPP), as defined by the Swedish economist G. Cassel in 1918, is that natural market conditions will adjust the exchange rates between the domestic currency and any foreign currency to reflect differences in the inflation rates between them, which means there is a direct correlation between the movement of inflation rates between two counties and their respective foreign exchange rates.