外汇交易和汇率脱节之谜

Martin D. D. Evans
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文考察了外汇市场上的交易是如何传递信息的,这些信息驱动着货币价格在几分钟、几天和几周内的波动;现在这些变动与利率有关。本文首先提出了一个在限价单(LOB)中进行外汇交易的模型,该模型确定了来自外部市场的信息如何反映在外汇价格和交易模式中。然后,我借助对欧元美元(世界上交易量最大的货币对)13年LOB交易数据估计的结构性VAR,对这一传递过程进行了实证检验。VAR估计揭示了几个新发现:首先,它们表明,来自LOB外部的冲击通过流动性和信息渠道影响外汇价格;这些通道的重要性根据震源的不同而不同。流动性对外汇价格的影响是暂时的,持续时间在2到10分钟之间,而信息冲击对价格的影响是永久性的。其次,价格变化与订单流量之间的同期相关性在不同的冲击中有所不同。一些冲击产生正相关(如标准交易模型),而其他冲击产生负相关。第三,模型估计表明,外汇价格的日内变动绝大多数是由一种冲击驱动的,它占外汇价格每小时变化的87%。论文的第二部分考察了贸易模型冲击与宏观经济的关系。为此,我使用VAR估计将日内外汇价格变化和订单流分解为由不同冲击驱动的单独组件。然后,我将这些组成部分汇总为每日和每周系列。我发现每日订单流的一个组成部分与美元和欧元利率之间的长期息差变化密切相关。这表明,推动这一订单流组成部分的日内冲击带来了有关未来短期利率的消息,而这一消息已嵌入到外汇价格中。我发现,在2003年至2015年期间,带有利率信息的日内冲击平均占欧元兑美元每日折旧率方差的56%,但在2007年之前和2011年之后,它们的方差贡献超过80%。这些发现表明,欧元兑美元的折旧率通过订单流的一个特定组成部分与宏观基本面相对良好地联系在一起。最后,我证明了嵌入流动性风险的流量对每日和每周欧元美元贬值率具有预测能力。
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FX Trading and the Exchange Rate Disconnect Puzzle
This paper examines how trading in the FX market carries the information that drives movements in currency prices over minutes, days and weeks; and now those movements are connected to interest rates. The paper first presents a model of FX trading in a Limit Order Book (LOB) that identifies how information from outside the market is reflected in FX prices and trading patterns. I then empirically examine this transmission process with the aid of a structural VAR estimated on 13 years of LOB trading data for the EURUSD, the world's most heavily traded currency pair. The VAR estimates reveal several new findings: first, they show that shocks from outside the LOB affect FX prices through both liquidity and information channel; and that the importance of these channels varies according to the source of the shock. Liquidity effects on FX prices are temporary, lasting between two and ten minutes, while information effects of shocks on prices are permanent. Second, the contemporaneous correlation between price changes and order flows varies across the shocks. Some shocks produce a positive correlation (as in standard trading models), while others produce a negative correlation. Third, the model estimates imply that intraday variations in FX prices are overwhelmingly driven by one type of shock, it accounts for 87% of hour-by-hour changes in the FX prices. The second part of the paper examines the connection between the shocks in the trading model and the macroeconomy. For this purpose, I use the VAR estimates to decompose intraday FX price changes and order flows into separate components driven by different shocks. I then aggregate these components into daily and weekly series. I find that one component of daily order flow is strongly correlated with changes in the long-term interest differentials between US and EUR rates. This suggests that the intraday shocks driving this order flow component carry news about future short-term interest rates which is embedded into FX prices. I find that intraday shocks carrying interest-rate information account for on average 56% of the variance in daily EURUSD depreciation rate between 2003 and 2015, but their variance contributions before 2007 and after 2011 are over 80%. These findings indicate that the EURUSD depreciation rate is relatively well-connected to macro fundamentals via a particular component of order flow. Finally, I show that flows embedding liquidity risk have forecasting power for daily and weekly EURUSD depreciation rates.
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