📄 Extracted Text (581 words)
1 September 2015
Special Report: The treat Accumulation' Is Over: FX Reserves Have Peaked. Beware OT
central banks. Regressing EUR/USD on the 2Y real rate spread and global reserves
in first differences—the latter entering with a two-month lag to ensure strict
exogeneity—indicates that the above shock would be worth a depreciation of 6
cents.
This first estimate proved surprisingly robust when using dynamic vector-
autoregressive models again to deal with endogeneity and lags more properly: the
likely impact on EUR/USD amounts to almost 7 cents in the first three months
before petering out. Our models also include the rate spread, ordered above the
exchange rate. The much greater positive impact on US than Eurozone yields
raises the 2Y real rate spread in favour of the US, consistent with the negative
impact on the exchange rate (Figure 26). A rough beta therefore associates an
exogenous shock to global reserves—that is one not triggered by valuation
effects—worth $100bn with EUR/USD by weakening by 3 cents. For other reserve
currencies, however, our models yielded insignificant results.
Fr - • rt in global resarves are tightly correlated Figure 26: A negative $200bn chock to global reserves
kith fluctuations in EUFULISD, less so with USD/JPY
%karma ....—Chars In global menet F.
lowers EURIUSD by -6 cents
0.03 T•T
4:11ange in EUR/USO
. . IrT kii 7
s
—Many in EUR/USO (tin) 0.06 4.01
-10
150 • 0.01 4.02
100 4-03
-20
50 0.02
4. 0E -30
0
4.05
40
4.02
-100
Correlation • 74% .so
-0.07
Months following -$200bn shock to global reserves
-60
01 02 03 04 05 06 07 Oa 09 10 11 12 la 14 15 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
tknoN.ve Pet
Moving to the impact on fixed income, declining FX reserves should place upward
pressure on developed market yields given that the bulk of reserves are allocated
to fixed income. In a number of seminal speeches, Ben Bernanke argued that it
was the EM "savings glut" and the reserve accumulation that accompanied it that
contributed to unusually low bond yields in the 2000s known at the Greenspan
"bond conundrum".'' A large literature has been generated since. A recent working
paper by ECB staff shows that the increase in foreign holdings of euro area bonds
from 2000 to mid-2006 - Greenspan's "bond conundrum" period - is associated
with a reduction of euro area long-term interest rates by about 1.55 percentage
points, in line with the estimated impact on US Treasury yields by other studies.'
On the short-term impact, one recent paper estimates that "if foreign official
inflows into U.S. Treasuries were to decrease in a given month by $100 billion, 5-
year Treasury rates would rise by about 40-60 basis points in the short run",
consistent with our estimates above.' China and oil exporting countries played an
important role in these flows.
` See Bemanke B. 'The Global Savings GM and the US Current Account Deficit'. April 14. 2005. &
Bernanke. B. et. Al. international Capital Flows and the Returns to Safe Assets". Federal Reserve Finance
Discussion Papers 1014. February 2011.
6
See Canalho. D. and M Adore (June 20151:Capital inflows and euro area long-term interest rates'. ECB
working paper 1799
' Beltran at ad I2013i. 'Foreign holdings of US Treasuries and US Treasury yields". Journal of intemabonal
Money and finance
Page 14 Deutsche Bank AG/t.ondon
CONFIDENTIAL — PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e) DB-SDNY-0118146
CONFIDENTIAL SDNY_GM_00264330
EFTA01458292
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
0dcd28bf8ab7e3cbec61f6f498956b36d2327f899c43716b06b1f6603ece0221
Bates Number
EFTA01458292
Dataset
DataSet-10
Document Type
document
Pages
1
Comments 0