The U.S. Treasury has the overall responsibility for
managing the U.S. government’s foreign currency holdings.
It works closely with the Federal Reserve to regulate
the dollar’s position in the FX markets. If the Treasury
feels that there is a need to weaken or strengthen the
dollar, it instructs the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York to intervene in the FX market as Treasury’s agent.
The Federal Reserve uses the Exchange Stabilization
Fund (ESF) to finance these interventions. Learn more
about the ESF .
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York buys dollars and
sells foreign currency to support the value of the dollar.
The Fed also sells dollars and buys foreign currency
to try and exert downward pressure on the price of the
dollar.
The transactions in the intervention are small compared
to the total volume of trading in the FX market and
these actions do not shift the balance of supply and
demand immediately. Instead, intervention is used as
a device to signal a desired exchange rate movement
and affect the behavior of investors in the FX market.
The frequency of intervention in the FX markets by
the U.S. monetary authorities has reduced tremendously
over the last decade. The Federal Reserve Bank of New
York intervened only twice since 1995.
Central banks in other countries have similar concerns
about their currencies and sometimes intervene in the
FX markets as well. Usually, intervention operations
are undertaken in coordination with other central banks.
Most of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s activities
in the foreign exchange market are for far less dramatic
purposes than to influence exchange rates. The New York
Fed often intervenes in the FX market as an agent for
other central banks and international organizations
to execute transactions related to flows of international
capital.
Learn more about the Federal Reserve Bank’s role in
the FX
market.
Some countries have special arrangements with other
countries to help them keep their currencies stable.
Many less developed countries have their soft currencies
pegged to hard currencies, so their value rises and
falls simultaneously with the stronger currency. Some
peg, or target, their currency to a basket of hard currencies,
the average of a group of selected currencies.
Countries that are part of the European Union (EU)
had pegged their currencies to the euro. There were
formulas set for converting from the euro to the currency
of each member nation. However, since January 2002,
all currencies that were part of the Economic and Monetary
System of the EU ceased to exist.
Intervention in the FX market is not the only way monetary
authorities can affect the value of their countries’
currencies. Central banks can also affect foreign exchange
rates indirectly by influencing interest rates.
| Higher interest rates è |
Value of currency goes up |
è
Investors want to buy currency
to invest at high rates |
| German interest rate è
8% |
U.S. interest rate
3% |
è
Demand for German mark goes up |
|