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Gross capital flows : the influence of stock of international assets, financial openness, exchange rate and reserve accumulation under extreme eventsRamírez Venegas, Sebastián Ignacio 07 1900 (has links)
Seminario para optar al título de Ingeniero Comercial, Mención Economía / Autor no autoriza el acceso a texto completo de su documento / Este trabajo analiza los determinantes de eventos extremos en
ujos de capitales bru-
tos. En particular, se focaliza en el rol del stock de activos internacionales, la apertura nanciera,
el r egimen cambiario y la acumulaci on de reservas, en la ocurrencia de una fuerte entrada (surges)
o signi cativa contracci on (stops) en in
ujos de capitales. Adem as, el trabajo estudia la in
uencia
de estas variables en eventos compensatorios por parte de los inversionistas residentes, es decir, un
fuerte aumento de las salidas de los
ujos brutos dado una fuerte entrada de in
ujos de capitales
(
ight en periodos de surges) o una fuerte reducci on de la salida de
ujos brutos (retrenchment)
dado a caidas abruptas por el lado de los in
ujos de capitales (retrenchment en periodos de stops).
Para realizar lo anterior, en las estimaciones se utilizan modelos de logit multinomial. Los resul-
tados sugieren que factores globales (factores push), en especial el riesgo global, son signi cativos
a la hora de estudiar los in
ujos de capitales. Por otro lado, para los eventos compensatorios son
m as relevantes los factores internos de cada pa s (factores pull), en los cuales el stocks de activos
internacionales cumple un rol fundamental. / This paper analyzes the determinants of extreme events in gross capital
ows. In
particular, it focuses on the role of stock of international assets, nancial openness, exchange
rate and reserves accumulation in the occurrence of extreme capital in
ows events (stops and
surges) and their in
uence in joint compensation events (retrenchment given stops and
ight
given surges). For this purpose, this work estimates multinomial logit models. The results sug-
gest that global factors (push factors), in particular, global risk, are signi cantly associated with
extreme capital in
ow episodes. On the other hand, country speci c factors (pull factors) are
relevant for compensatory events, in particular, for the stock of international assets.
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Essays on international capital flows and macroprudential oversightOsina, Nataliia January 2018 (has links)
This thesis presents three essays on the main determinants and regulations of international capital flows. The essays contribute to an ongoing significant debate among scholars and practitioners on what determines international capital flows by examining the following issues: Global liquidity, market sentiment and financial stability indices; Global liquidity and capital flow regulations; and Global governance and gross capital flows dynamics. In the first essay, we explore the main determinants of global liquidity, measured using cross-border claims of banks, and establish the link between a variety of financial stability indices and global liquidity. For a sample of 149 countries between 2000 and 2016, we find that Bloomberg Financial Stability Indices are more powerful in explaining global liquidity than FRED Financial Stress Indices and the Euro Area Systemic Stress Composite Indicator (CISS). Moreover, both market sentiment indices, namely the US Conference Board Leading Economic Index (LEI) and the US IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism Index are economically and statistically significant on cross-border bank flows. The research provides useful insights on what market sentiment and financial stability indices are better to employ for financial markets surveillance and as such practice of investment management. We argue that anyone interested in using financial stability indices as indicators of financial conditions and the level of financial stress would benefit from tracking several indices and not just one. The second essay examines the effectiveness of capital controls and macroprudential policies as ways to manage the volume of international capital flows, controlling for other determinants. The findings show that capital controls imposed on inflows generally prevail over controls imposed on outflows in reducing the magnitude of capital flows. The results are consistent with the pecking order theory on capital flows and are connected with the riskiness of different asset classes. For a sample of 112 countries over 2000 and 2016, we find that FX and/or countercyclical reserve (RR_REV) and general countercyclical capital buffer requirements (CTC), reserve requirement ratios (RR) and concentration limits (CONC) are the most effective macroprudential policies for managing countries' exposures to global liquidity fluctuations. Moreover, progress is being made to reduce the systemic risks created by systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs) using macroprudential policies. The results reflect recent developments in Basel III regulations and shed light on the effective calibration of capital flow regulations to country-specific circumstances. The final essay examines the link between global governance indicators and patterns of gross capital flows, controlling for other determinants. For a sample of 67 countries between 2000 and 2016, we contribute to explain the existence of the Lucas paradox (1990) on "why doesn't capital flow from rich to poor countries" and the Feldstein-Horioka puzzle (1980). The findings show that institutional quality rather than the effect of diminishing returns of capital is a key explanation for the Lucas paradox. Finally, we provide new evidence on the relationship between the multidimensional nature of financial development and gross capital flows. The findings show the importance and predominance of financial institutions versus financial markets in the dissemination of international capital flows across counties.
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