Eurodollars
Eurodollars come into existence when the ownership of dollar
deposits in United States banks passes into the hands of foreign banks. The
dollar deposits, more commonly called demand deposits or checking accounts,
remain in United States banks, but the owners of the deposits are foreign banks,
or foreign branches of United States banks. Individuals in foreign countries
have dollar deposits in United States banks, but these deposits do not count as
Eurodollars. Dollar deposits owned by foreign banks count as Eurodollars because
these banks conduct a business of attracting dollar deposits and making dollar
loans. Eurodollar deposits in foreign banks are interest-paying time deposits,
usually of large amounts, and borrowers of dollars can turn to these foreign
banks for dollar loans.
In the late 1950s European banks first began holding deposits denominated in
dollars, and borrowing and lending in dollars. The probable cause of the growth
of the Eurodollar market lay with interest rate ceilings in the United States.
Regulation Q, promulgated by the Federal Reserve Board, put a legal ceiling of
less than 6 percent on interest rates that time deposits could pay in United
States banks. The payment of interest rates that exceeded the legal interest
rate ceiling in the United States constituted one of the major attractions of
Eurodollar deposits. When interest rates soared in the 1970s, foreign banks, not
subject to United States banking regulations, were able to pay much higher
interests on time deposits, and make dollar loans on favorable terms. In the
1980s the deregulation of United States banking took away some of the
competitive advantage of Eurodollars, but the Eurodollar market had already
established itself. From 1976 until 1992, Eurodollars grew from $14 billion to
$56 billion.
The growth of multinational corporations, major customers in the Eurodollar
market, may have contributed to the expansion of Eurodollars. Growth was further
facilitated because the Eurodollar market made dealing in dollars a daytime
affair in European time zones. Large United States banks also have borrowed
funds in the Eurodollar market, and during the cold war, the Soviet government
kept dollar deposits in European banks to prevent the United States government
from freezing Soviet assets in a political dispute.
London is the headquarters for the Eurodollar market, but Eurodollar
transactions take place worldwide. Banks in the Bahamas, Cayman Islands, Canada,
Hong Kong, and Singapore hold dollar deposits and lend dollars.
Eurodollars are a subspecies of Eurocurrencies, all of which have
extraterritorial markets such as the Eurodollar market. Other important
Eurocurrencies are Japanese yen, German marks, British pounds, French francs,
and Swiss francs. Luxembourg is headquarters for Euromark deposits, and Paris
and Brussels for Eurosterling deposits.
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