Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T19:24:19.042Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Error-Learning in the Eurodollar Market

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2009

Extract

During the last 15 years, the Eurodollar deposit market has grown from perhaps $1 billion to a level now estimated to exceed $200 billion. This growth has prompted numerous arguments and investigations as to its cause [cf. 14, 22, 27], factors influencing it [cf. 24, 28, 29, 32], its import for U.S. banking and monetary policy [cf. 2, 38], its role in international financial market integration [cf. 1, 9, 39], and its impact on the internationalization of U.S. monetary policy [cf. 18, 23]. Over this same period of time, an increasing empirical interest has developed in the term structure of interest rates. Yet most empirical studies of the Eurodollar market [cf. 2, 28, 29, 32] have employed the 90-day Eurodollar CD rate as though it were “the rate of interest” in this market. This tendency has resulted more from the empirical ease of computing covered interest differentials in conjunction with the three–month forward exchange rate than from theoretical considerations [cf. 32, p. 7].

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © School of Business Administration, University of Washington 1975

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

[1]Aliber, R.Exchange Risk, Yield Curves, and the Pattern of Capital Flows.” Journal of Finance, May 1969, pp. 361370.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[2]Black, Stanley. “An Econometric Study of Eurodollar Borrowing by New York Banks and the Rate of Interest on Eurodollars.” Journal of Finance, March 1971, pp. 8388.Google Scholar
[3]Buse, A.Interest Rates, the Meiselman Model and Random Numbers.” Journal of Political Economy, February 1967, pp. 4962.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[4]Buse, A.Term Structure of Interest Rates: A Review of Recent Research.” Canadian Bank, January–February 1969, pp. 20 ff.Google Scholar
[5]Culbertson, John M.The Term Structure of Interest Rates.” Quarterly Journal of Economics, November 1957, pp. 485517.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[6]Durand, David. Basic Yields of Corporate Bonds, 1900–1942. National Bureau of Economic Research, Technical Paper No. 3. New York, 1942.Google Scholar
[7]Durand, David. “A Quarterly Series of Corporate Basic Yields, 1952–1957, and Some Attendant Reservations.” The Journal of Finance, September 1958, pp. 35.Google Scholar
[8]Durand, David, and Winn, Willis J.. Basic Yields of Bonds, 1926–1947: Their Measurement and Pattern. National Bureau of Economic Research, Technical Paper No. 6. New York, 1947.Google Scholar
[9]Einzig, Paul. The Euro-dollar System, 3rd ed.London: Macmillan, 1967.Google Scholar
[10]Eurodollar Financing, 2nd ed.New York: Chase Manhattan Bank, 1968.Google Scholar
[11]The Financing of Business with Eurodollars. New York: Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., 1967.Google Scholar
[12]Findlay, M. “Considerations for the Multinational Firm in Obtaining Funds from the Euro-Capital Markets.” In Management of the Multinationals, edited by Sethi, and Holton, . New York: Free Press, 1974, pp. 292312.Google Scholar
[13]Fisher, I.Appreciation and Interest.” Publications of the American Economic Association, August 1896, pp. 23ff.Google Scholar
[14]Friedman, Milton. “The Eurodollar Market: Some First Principles.” The Morgan Guaranty Survey, October 1969, pp. 14.Google Scholar
[15]Grant, J. A. G.Meiselman on the Structure of Interest Rates: A British Test.” Economics, February 1964, pp. 3638.Google Scholar
[16]Hickman, William B.The Term Structure of Interest Rates: An Exploratory Analysis. National Bureau of Economic Research. New York, 1943.Google Scholar
[17]Hicks, J. R.Value and Capital, 2nd ed.London, Oxford University Press, 1946.Google Scholar
[18]Hendershott, Patric H.The Structure of International Interest Rates: The U.S. Treasury Bill Rate and the Euro-dollar Deposit Rate.” The Journal of Finance, September 1967, pp. 455465.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[19]Kessel, Reuben H.The Cyclical Behavior of the Term Structure of Interest Rates. National Bureau of Economic Research, Occasional Paper No. 91. New York, 1965.Google Scholar
[20]Kindleberger, Charles. “The Pros and Cons of an International Capital Market.” Zeits, fur die Ges. Staats., October 1967, pp. 600617.Google Scholar
[21]Klopstock, Fred. “The Eurodollar Market: Some Unresolved Issues.” Essays in International Finance, Department of Economics, Princeton University, March 1968.Google Scholar
[22]Klopstock, Fred. “Money Creation in the Eurodollar Market: A Note on Professor Friedman's Views.” FRB of New York Monthly Review, January 1970, pp. 1215.Google Scholar
[23]Kwack, Sung. “The Structure of International Interest Rates: An Extension of Hendershott's Tests.” Journal of Finance, September 1971, pp. 897900.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[24]Levin, Jay. “A Financial Sector Analysis of the Eurodollar Market.” Journal of Finance, March 1974, pp. 103117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[25]Lutz, F. A.The Structure of Interest Rates.” Quarterly Journal of Economics, November 1940, pp. 3663.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[26]Macaulay, Frederick R.The Movements of Interest Rates, Bond Yields and Stock Prices in the United States Since 1856. New York: National Bureau of Economic Research, 1938.Google Scholar
[27]Machlup, F.Eurodollar Creation: A Mystery Story.” Banca Nazionale Del Lavoro Quarterly Review, September 1970, pp. 219260.Google Scholar
[28]Makin, John. “Demand and Supply Functions for Stocks of Eurodollar Deposits: An Empirical Study.” Review of Economics and Statistics, 1972, pp. 381391.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[29]Makin, John. “Identifying a Reserve Base for the Eurodollar System.” Journal of Finance, June 1973, pp. 609618.Google Scholar
[30]Meiselman, David. The Term Structure of Interest Rates. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice–Hall, Inc., 1962.Google Scholar
[31]Mendelson, Morris. “The Eurobond and Capital Market Integration.– Journal of Finance, March 1972, pp. 110126.Google Scholar
[32]Mills, Rodney. “Explaining Changes in Eurodollar Positions: A Study of Banks in Four European Countries.” Staff Economics Study. Washington: Federal Reserve System, 1972.Google Scholar
[33]Modigliani, Franco, and Sutch, Richard. “Debt Management and the Term Structure of Interest Rates: An Empirical Analysis of Recent Experience.” Journal of Political Economy, Supplement: August, 1967, pp. 569589.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[34]Modigliani, Franco, and Sutch, Richard. “Innovations in Interest Rate Policy.” American Economic Review, May 1966, pp. 178197.Google Scholar
[35]Nelson, Charles R.The Term Structure of Interest Rates. New York: Basic Books, Inc. Publishers, 1972.Google Scholar
[36]Roll, Richard. The Behavior of Interest Rates: The Application of the Efficient Market Model to U.S. Treasury Bills. New York: Basic Books, Inc. Publishers, 1970.Google Scholar
[37]Roll, Richard. “Interest-Rate Risk and the Term Structure of Interest Rates: Comment.” Journal of Political Economy, December 1966, pp. 629631.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[38]Steib, Steve. “The Demand for Eurodollar Borrowings by U.S. Banks.” Journal of Finance, September 1973, pp. 875879.Google Scholar
[39]Swoboda, Alex. “The Eurodollar Market: An Interpretation.” Essays in International Finance, Department of Economics, Princeton University, February 1968.Google Scholar
[40]Telser, L. G.A Critique of Some Recent Empirical Research on the Explanation of the-Term Structure of Interest Rates.” Journal of Political Economy, Supplement: August, 1967, pp. 546561.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[41]Van Home, James C.Function and Analysis of Capital Market Rates. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1970.Google Scholar
[42]Van Home, James C.Interest-Rate Risk and the Term Structure of Interest Rates. Journal of Political Economy, August 1965, pp. 344351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[43]Van Home, James C.Interest-Rate Risk and the Term Structure of Interest Rates: Reply.” Journal of Political Economy, December 1966, pp. 632634.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[44]Wood, John H.Expectations, Error, and the Term Structure of Interest Rates.” Journal of Political Economy, April 1963, pp. 160171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[45]World Financial Markets. New York: Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. Published monthly.Google Scholar
[46]Zenoff, David, and Zwick, Jack. International Financial Management. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, 1969.Google Scholar