Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Akshay Sawant MMS Finance.  55 Rs/$ 52 Rs/$ Rupee Appreciated & Dollar Depreciated  Dollar depreciated by (52/55)-1 i.e. 5.4 %  Rupee appreciated by.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Akshay Sawant MMS Finance.  55 Rs/$ 52 Rs/$ Rupee Appreciated & Dollar Depreciated  Dollar depreciated by (52/55)-1 i.e. 5.4 %  Rupee appreciated by."— Presentation transcript:

1 Akshay Sawant MMS Finance

2  55 Rs/$ 52 Rs/$ Rupee Appreciated & Dollar Depreciated  Dollar depreciated by (52/55)-1 i.e. 5.4 %  Rupee appreciated by [ (1/52)/(1/55) ] – 1 i.e. (0.01923)/(0.01818) – 1 = 5.769 %

3  The law of one price says that the same good in different competitive markets must sell for the same price, when transportation costs and barriers between markets are not important.

4  Japan cheapest, UK most expensive  Yen is undervalued, Pound overvalued EXCHANGE RATE (US) US$ VALUE $29.99 $1 = ¥ 114.572500/114.57 = $21.82 $1 = £ 0.559125/.5591 = $44.72 COUNTRYLOCAL CURRENCY US$ 29.99 Japan¥ 2500 UK£ 25

5  The exchange rate between two countries will be identical to the ratio of the price levels for those two countries. E (Rs/$) = P (Rs) / P ($)  EG Price of a product in India = 250 Rs Price of same product in US = 5 $ Thus E (Rs/$) = 250/5 = 50 Rs/$

6  The following conditions must be met for this relationship to be true: 1.The goods of each country must be freely tradable on the international market. 2.The price index for each of the two countries must be comprised of the same basket of goods. 3.All of the prices need to be indexed to the same year.

7 Relative purchasing power parity relates the change in two countries' expected inflation rates to the change in their exchange rates. E(N) = E(0) (DC/FC) (1 + I DC ) / (1 + I FC ) Where, E(0) is the spot exchange rate at the beginning of the time period. E(N) is the spot exchange rate at the end of the N years. I FC is the expected annualized inflation rate for foreign country. I DC is the expected annualized inflation rate for domestic country.

8  E(0) = 55 Rupees per dollar.  Consider annual inflation rate for the U.S. to be 1.4 %  The annual expected Indian inflation rate is 6.87 %  E(0) = 55 Rs per dollar. (1 + I FC ) = 1.014 (1 + I DC ) = 1.0687.  S 1 = (1.0687) / (1.014) × 55 = 57.9669 Rupees per $

9 PRODUCTS USA IN $INDIA RUPEE/DOLLAR Coke, Pepsi120 Candy bars & chocolates- snickers, 120 1 tin of frozen yogurt( 2 tins from Wal-Mart) 115 1 small packet of lays110 500 ml purified water110 20 -30 strips of chewing gum 120 PPP Conversion factor 15.83

10  Introduced in The Economist in September 1986 by Pam Woodall  Informal way of measuring the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) between two currencies  Big Mac was chosen because it is available to a common specification in many countries around the world

11  Big Mac PPP exchange rate between two countries is obtained by dividing the price of a Big Mac in one country by the price of a Big Mac in another country.  This value is then compared with the actual exchange rate; if it is lower, then the first currency is under-valued compared with the second, and conversely, if it is higher, then the first currency is over-valued.

12  1$ = 55 Rs  Big Mac price in US 4.33 $...So price in India should be 238 Rs  But in India Price is 89 Rs  Thus PPP exchange rate is 20.57 (89/4.33)  Indians would produce in India and sell in US for the arbitrage opportunity  Thus Rupee will appreciate

13


Download ppt "Akshay Sawant MMS Finance.  55 Rs/$ 52 Rs/$ Rupee Appreciated & Dollar Depreciated  Dollar depreciated by (52/55)-1 i.e. 5.4 %  Rupee appreciated by."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google