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API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel Lecture 3: Country Risk 1. The portfolio-balance model with default risk. 2. Default. 3. What determines sovereign spreads? 4. Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA).
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Lecture 3: Country Risk - Harvard University 119/API-119 slides/L3... · Lecture 3: Country Risk 1. ... The international debt crisis GFC Asia crisis . ... to international banking

Apr 11, 2018

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Page 1: Lecture 3: Country Risk - Harvard University 119/API-119 slides/L3... · Lecture 3: Country Risk 1. ... The international debt crisis GFC Asia crisis . ... to international banking

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

Lecture 3: Country Risk

1. The portfolio-balance model with default risk.

2. Default.

3. What determines sovereign spreads?

4. Debt Sustainability Analysis (DSA).

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API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

• The portfolio-balance model can be very general (menu of assets).

– In Lecture 2, we considered a special case relevant to rich-country bonds: currency risk is the only risk.

– Some modifications are appropriate for developing-country debt, starting with the risk of default.

• One lesson of portfolio diversification theory: A country that borrows too much drives up the expected rate of return it must pay. The supply of funds is not infinitely elastic. -- especially for developing countries.

1. The portfolio balance model applied to country risk

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Demand for assets issued by various countries f:

x i, t = Ai + [ρV]i -1 Et (r ft+1 – r dt+1) ;

• Now the expected return Et (r ft+1) subtracts from i ft

the probability of default times loss in event of default.

• Similarly, the variances & covariances factor in risks of loss through default.

• When perceptions of risk are high [ρV], interest rates must be high for investors to absorb given supplies of debt

– “risk off” in global financial markets.

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

Developing countries:

• are usually assumed to be debtors;

• Debt to foreigners was usually $-denominated (before 2000).

• Then, expected return = observed spread between interest rate on the country’s loans or bonds & risk-free $ rate, minus expected loss through default -- instead of rp .

• Denominator for Debt : More relevant than world wealth is

the country’s GDP or X. Why? Earnings determine ability to repay.

• Supply-of-lending-curve slopes up: when debt is large investors fear default & build a country risk premium into i.

• must pay a premium as compensation for default risk.

The view from the South

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Source: Reinhart and Rogoff, This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly, 2011, pp.86-100.

2. Default

• Venezuela has defaulted 9 times since independence in 1821. • Nigeria has defaulted 5 times since independence in 1960. • Greece has been in default on its debt half the time since independence in 1829. • Spain has defaulted the most: 6 times in the 18th century, and 7 in the 19th.

Latin American

independence

Great Depression

The international debt crisis

GFC

Asia crisis

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Why don’t debtor countries default more often, given absence of an international enforcement mechanism?

1. They want to preserve their creditworthiness, to borrow again in the future. Kletzer & Wright (2000), Amador (2003), Aguiar & Gopinath (2006), Arellano (2008), Yue (2010).

But: • Some find defaulters don’t seem to bear much of a penalty for long: Eichengreen (1987), Eichengreen & Portes (2000), Arellano (2009), Panizza, Sturzenegger & Zettelmeyer (2009).

• Not a sustainable repeated-game equilibrium: Bulow-Rogoff (1989).

2. Best answer (perhaps): Defaulters may lose access to international banking system, including trade credit.

Loss of credit disrupts production, even for export. Theory: Eaton & Gersovitz (RES 1981, EER 1986). Evidence: Rose (JDE 2005).

3. Cynical answer: Finance Ministers want to remain members in good standing of the international elite.

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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New finding: For some years after a restructuring, the defaulter is excluded from access to international finance.

Juan Cruces &

Christoph Trebesch,

2013, “Sovereign

Defaults: The Price

of Haircuts,” AEJ: Macro,

Fig.5, p. 111.

Estimated from 67 restructurings,

1980-2009

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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Laura Jaramillo & Catalina Michelle Tejada, IMF Working Paper, 2011

EMBI is correlated with risk perceptions

“risk on”

risk off

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

3. What determines sovereign spreads?

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For some years after a restructuring, the defaulter has to pay higher interest rates,

especially if creditors had to take a big write-down (“haircut”).

Estimated, 1993-2010

Cruces & Trebesch, 2013, “Sovereign Defaults: The Price of Haircuts,” Fig.3.

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

especially the 1st 5 years

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Eichengreen & Mody (2000):

Spreads charged by banks on emerging market loans are significantly:

• higher if the country has: • high total ratio of Debt/GDP, • rescheduled in previous year • high Debt Service / X, or • unstable exports; and

• reduced if it has: • a good credit rating, • high growth, or • high reserves/short-term debt

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

• The spread may rise steeply when Debt/GDP is high.

b

iSupply of

funds from world

investors

≡ Debt/GDP

Stiglitz: it may even bend backwards, due to rising risk of default.

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• What determines if a country becomes “insolvent”?

• It depends not on the level of debt directly,

• but, rather, on whether the ratio b ≡ debt/GDP is on an unsustainable path.

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

4. Debt dynamics:

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where n nominal growth rate.

=> Debt ratio explodes if d > 0 and i > n (or r > real growth rate).

where Y ≡ nominal GDP.

Definition of sustainability: a steady or falling debt/GDP ratio

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

= 𝑃𝑟𝑖𝑚𝑎𝑟𝑦 𝐷𝑒𝑓𝑖𝑐𝑖𝑡 + (𝑖 𝐷𝑒𝑏𝑡)

𝑌 − 𝑏𝑛

= 𝑇𝑜𝑡𝑎𝑙 𝐹𝑖𝑠𝑐𝑎𝑙 𝐷𝑒𝑓𝑖𝑐𝑖𝑡

𝑌 −

𝐷𝑒𝑏𝑡

𝑌 𝑑𝑌/𝑑𝑡

𝑌

𝑑𝑏

𝑑𝑡 =

𝑑 𝐷𝑒𝑏𝑡/𝑑𝑡

𝑌 −

𝐷𝑒𝑏𝑡

𝑌2

𝑑𝑌

𝑑𝑡

𝑏 ≡ 𝐷𝑒𝑏𝑡

𝑌

=> 𝑑𝑏

𝑑𝑡 = 𝑑 + 𝑖 𝑏 − 𝑏𝑛 where d Primary Deficit / Y .

= 𝑑 + 𝑖 − 𝑛 𝑏.

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dt

db

Y

Debtb = d + (i - n) b. where

n nominal growth rate, and d primary deficit / Y .

n1

ius

i

b

range of explosive debt

range of

declining Debt/GDP ratio

0

db/dt=0

Debt dynamics line shows the relationship between b and (i-n), for db/dt = 0.

Even with a primary surplus (d<0), if i is high (relative to n), then b is on explosive path.

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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Debt dynamics, continued

• It is best to keep b low to begin with, especially for “debt-intolerant countries.”

• Otherwise, it may be hard to stay on the stable path • if

– i rises suddenly, • due to either a rise in world i* (e.g., 1982, 2016), or • an increase in risk concerns (e.g., 2008);

– or n exogenously slows down.

• Now add the upward-sloping supply of funds curve.

• i includes a default premium, which probably depends in turn on db/dt.

• => It may be difficult or impossible to escape the unstable path – without default, write-down, or restructuring of the debt, – or else inflating it away,

• if you are lucky enough to have borrowed in your own currency.

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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Debt dynamics, with inelastic supply of funds

n1

ius

i

b 0

Greece 2012

Ireland 2012

range of explosive debt

range of

declining Debt/GDP

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School, Harvard University

explosive debt path

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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Appendix 1: Debt dynamics graph, with possible unstable equilibrium

Y

Debtb

{

sovereign spread

Initial debt dynamics line

Supply of funds line

iUS

i

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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(1) Good times. Growth is strong. db/dt = 0, or if > 0 nobody minds. Default premium is small.

(2) Adverse shift. Say growth n slows down. Debt dynamics line shifts down, so the country suddenly falls in the range db/dt>0. => gradually moving rightward along the supply-of-lending curve.

(3) Adjustment. The government responds by a fiscal contraction, turning budget into a surplus (d<0). This shifts the debt dynamics line back up. If the shift is big enough, then once again db/dt=0.

(4) Repeat. What if there is a further adverse shift? E.g., a further growth slowdown (n↓) in response to the higher i & budget

surplus. => b starts to climb again. But by now we are into steep part of the supply-of-lending curve. There is now substantial fear of default => i rises sharply. The system could be unstable….

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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• EM sovereign spreads, 1994-2008

• The blurring of lines between debt of advanced countries and developing countries, 2009-. – Since the crisis of the euro periphery began in Greece,

we have become aware that “advanced” countries also have sovereign default risk.

Appendix 2: Recent history of sovereign spreads

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

WesternAsset.com

Bpblogspot.com

↑ Spreads shot up in 1990s crises, • and fell to low levels in next decade.↓

Spreads rose again in Sept. 2008 ↑ , • esp. on $-denominated debt • & in E.Europe. ↓

World Bank

Sovereign spreads

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Spreads for Italy, Greece, & other Mediterranean members of € were near zero, from 2001 until 2008

and then shot up in 2010

Market Nighshift Nov. 16, 2011 API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel

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Turkey is able to borrow in local currency (lira), but has to pay a high currency premium to do so.

{ Pure default risk premium on lira debt {

Total premium on

Turkey’s lira debt

over US treasuries

Schreger & Du, “Local Currency Sovereign Risk,” HU, 2013, Fig. 5

API-119 - Prof.J.Frankel