Effects of Monetary Policy Shocks on the Exchange Rate in the Republic of Korea: Capital Flows in Stock and Bond Markets
Kim, Soyoung | June 2014
Abstract
Several studies have suggested that the prediction of standard theory on the effects of monetary policy on the exchange rate might not be applicable to or in the case of the Republic of Korea because participation of foreign investors is weak in the bond market but strong in the stock market. The current study examines the effects of monetary policy shocks on the exchange rate in the Republic of Korea by using structural vector auto-regression models with sign restrictions. To determine the channels by which monetary policy shocks affect the exchange rate, I investigate the effects on various components of capital flows. The main empirical findings are as follows. First, a contractionary monetary policy shock, which increases the interest rate, appreciates the Korean won significantly in the short run as predicted by most theories. Second, contractionary monetary policy shocks increase capital inflows into the bond market consistent with the prediction of the uncovered interest parity condition. This seems to be the main channel by which contractionary monetary shocks appreciate the won. Finally, foreign investors tend to withdraw money from the domestic stock market in response to a monetary tightening, resulting in a decrease in capital inflows.
Citation
Kim, Soyoung. 2014. Effects of Monetary Policy Shocks on the Exchange Rate in the Republic of Korea: Capital Flows in Stock and Bond Markets. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/4105. License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.Keywords
Development
Finance
Development Challenges
Development Issues
Development Problems
Microenterprises Finance
Commercial Finance Companies
Enterprise Financing
Financial Analysis
Banking Finance And Investment
ADB
Project finance
Development plans
Strategic planning
Business Financing
Investment Requirements
Insurance Companies
International Monetary Relations
International Financial Market
Exchange Rate
Insurers
Insurance stocks
Insurance holding companies
Insurance carriers
Insurance agencies
Business subsidies
Investment companies
International banks and banking
Stock exchanges
Show allCollapse
Citable URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11540/4105Metadata
Show full item recordUsers also downloaded
-
Managing Capital Flows in Asia: An Overview of Key Issues
Yap, Josef; Villafuerte, James (Asian Development Bank, 2015-11-24)Global capital flows into emerging markets, including those in Asia, continue to be volatile. These capital flows generate both benefits and costs. The latter are associated with episodes of currency and banking crises like the 1997 Asian financial crisis and the 2008 global financial and economic crisis. Recent data show that the main impact of capital flows on the economies of East Asia is ...Global capital flows into emerging markets, including those in Asia, continue to be volatile. These capital flows generate both benefits and costs. The latter are associated with episodes of currency and banking crises like the 1997 Asian financial ... -
The Impact of Capital Inflows on Emerging East Asian Economies: Is Too Much Money Chasing Too Little Good?
Kimand, Soyoung; Yang, Doo Yong (Asian Development Bank, 2008-05-15)In recent years, emerging East Asian economies have experienced large capital inflows—especially a surge in portfolio inflows—and an appreciation of asset prices such as equities, land, and both nominal and real exchange rates. The paper reviews why a surge in capital inflows can increase asset prices, and then empirically investigates the effects by employing a panel vector autoregression (VAR) ...In recent years, emerging East Asian economies have experienced large capital inflows—especially a surge in portfolio inflows—and an appreciation of asset prices such as equities, land, and both nominal and real exchange rates. The paper reviews why a ...