To understand deviations from covered interest parity (CIP), it is crucial to account for heterogeneity in funding costs across both banks and currency areas. For most market participants, the no-arbitrage relation holds fairly well when implemented using marginal funding costs and risk-free investment instruments. However, a few high-rated banks do enjoy CIP-arbitrage opportunities. Dealers avert inventory imbalances stemming from lower-rated banks' usage of FX swaps to obtain dollar funding by inducing opposite (arbitrage) flows from high-rated banks. Arbitrage trades are difficult to scale, however, because funding costs increase as soon as arbitrageurs increase positions.
CITATION STYLE
Rime, D., Schrimpf, A., & Syrstad, O. (2022). Covered Interest Parity Arbitrage. In Review of Financial Studies (Vol. 35, pp. 5185–5227). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/rfs/hhac026
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