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Showing papers by "Horacio Sapriza published in 2017"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper explored the direct effects and spillovers of unconventional monetary and exchange rate policies and found that official purchases of foreign assets have a large positive effect on a country's current account that diminishes considerably as capital mobility rises.
Abstract: This paper explores the direct effects and spillovers of unconventional monetary and exchange rate policies. We find that official purchases of foreign assets have a large positive effect on a country’s current account that diminishes considerably as capital mobility rises. There is an important additional effect through the lagged stock of official assets. Official purchases of domestic assets, or quantitative easing (QE), appear to have no significant effect on a country’s current account when capital mobility is high, but there is a modest positive impact when capital mobility is low. The effects of purchases of foreign assets spill over to other countries in proportion to their degree of international financial integration. We also find that increases in US bond yields are associated with increases in foreign bond yields and in stock prices, as well as with depreciations of foreign currencies, but that all of these effects are smaller on days of US unconventional monetary policy announcements. We develop a theoretical model that is broadly consistent with our empirical results and that highlights the potential usefulness of domestic unconventional policies as responses to the effects of foreign policies of a similar type.

33 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper explored the effects of unconventional monetary and exchange rate policies on current account and found that official foreign asset purchases have large effects on current accounts that diminish as capital mobility rises and spill over to financially integrated countries.
Abstract: This paper explores the effects of unconventional monetary and exchange rate policies. We find that official foreign asset purchases have large effects on current accounts that diminish as capital mobility rises and spill over to financially integrated countries. There is an additional effect through the stock of central bank assets. Domestic asset purchases have an effect on current accounts only when capital mobility is low. We also find that rising US bond yields drive foreign yields, stock prices and depreciations, but less so on days of policy announcements. We develop a theoretical model that is broadly consistent with our results.

11 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article explored the direct effects and spillovers of unconventional monetary and exchange rate policies and found that official purchases of foreign assets have a large positive effect on a country's current account that diminishes considerably as capital mobility rises.
Abstract: This paper explores the direct effects and spillovers of unconventional monetary and exchange rate policies. We find that official purchases of foreign assets have a large positive effect on a country's current account that diminishes considerably as capital mobility rises. There is an important additional effect through the lagged stock of official assets. Official purchases of domestic assets, or quantitative easing (QE), appear to have no significant effect on a country's current account when capital mobility is high, but there is a modest positive impact when capital mobility is low. The effects of purchases of foreign assets spill over to other countries in proportion to their degree of international financial integration. We also find that increases in US bond yields are associated with increases in foreign bond yields and in stock prices, as well as with depreciations of foreign currencies, but that all of these effects are smaller on days of US unconventional monetary policy announcements. We develop a theoretical model that is broadly consistent with our empirical results and that highlights the potential usefulness of domestic unconventional policies as responses to the effects of foreign policies of a similar type.

10 citations


Posted Content
TL;DR: In this article, a partir des donnees sur les creances bancaires bilaterales tirees des statistiques bancaire territoriales de la Banque des Reglements Internationaux pour la periode allant de 1995 a 2014, nous analytons l'incidence de la politique monetaire sur les fluxbancaires transfrontieres.
Abstract: A partir des donnees sur les creances bancaires bilaterales tirees des statistiques bancaires territoriales de la Banque des Reglements Internationaux pour la periode allant de 1995 a 2014, nous analysons l’incidence de la politique monetaire sur les flux bancaires transfrontieres. Nous constatons que la politique monetaire d’un pays source est un determinant important des flux bancaires transfrontieres.

7 citations


Posted Content
TL;DR: This paper explored the direct effects and spillovers of unconventional monetary and exchange rate policies and found that official purchases of foreign assets have a large positive effect on a country's current account that diminishes considerably as capital mobility rises.
Abstract: This paper explores the direct effects and spillovers of unconventional monetary and exchange rate policies. We find that official purchases of foreign assets have a large positive effect on a country's current account that diminishes considerably as capital mobility rises. There is an important additional effect through the lagged stock of official assets. Official purchases of domestic assets, or quantitative easing (QE), appear to have no significant effect on a country's current account when capital mobility is high, but there is a modest positive impact when capital mobility is low. The effects of purchases of foreign assets spill over to other countries in proportion to their degree of international financial integration. We also find that increases in US bond yields are associated with increases in foreign bond yields and in stock prices, as well as with depreciations of foreign currencies, but that all of these effects are smaller on days of US unconventional monetary policy announcements. We develop a theoretical model that is broadly consistent with our empirical results and that highlights the potential usefulness of domestic unconventional policies as responses to the effects of foreign policies of a similar type.

2 citations