Exchange rate misalignments, capital flows and volatility

Axel Grossmann, Alexei G. Orlov

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study investigates the effect of three dimensions of exchange rate misalignments—(i) distance (absolute misalignments), (ii) direction (overvaluation or undervaluation), and (iii) degree (small or large misalignments)—on the overall as well as short-cycle exchange rate volatility. Using data from 1988 to 2014, we find that relative PPP-based exchange rate misalignments increase exchange rate volatility. For developed and developing countries, this increase in volatility is driven mainly by large undervalued misalignments of the U.S. dollar. This finding might be linked to interventions targeting the loss in domestic producers’ competitiveness in global markets. Interestingly, in the case of developed countries, we find this adverse effect on exchange rate volatility also for small absolute misalignments; exchange rate movements close to equilibrium may be associated with ambiguity with respect to future movements in developed countries, which can result in higher exchange rate volatility. Further, the results suggest that, when the dollar is highly undervalued, capital flows have a stabilizing effect on exchange rate volatility in developed countries but a destabilizing effect in developing countries. The finding is consistent with investors’ strategy of taking exchange rate overvaluation and undervaluation into account when engaging in cross-border investments.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101640
JournalNorth American Journal of Economics and Finance
Volume60
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2022

Keywords

  • Exchange rate misalignments
  • Exchange rate volatility
  • Net capital flows
  • Overvaluation and undervaluation
  • Short-cycle components of volatility
  • Spectral analysis

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