Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byVirginia Randall Modified over 9 years ago
1
Highlighting a Few Key Ideas and Issues
3
Strategic Targets Inflation (low, stable); Unemployment (low) ▪ “Dual Mandate” by law ▪ Weight between the two matter of debate and policy (Phillips Curve issues) Operational Target: Interest Rates “Discount Rate”: only rate actually set by the Fed is the Other rates are merely influenced by Fed policy Fed Funds Rate: primary target rate ▪ Target FF rate set at Fed (FOMC) meetings ▪ Effective FF rate set between banks using excess funds held on account with Fed ▪ Don’t pay too much attention to Fed rhetoric (political speech)
4
Money Supply (primary tool) No interest rate “knob” to adjust Manipulates buying and selling Treasury bills/bonds (“Open Market Operations”) During 2007-09 Crisis, Fed engaged in other, non-traditional ways of providing liquidity to short term lending markets
5
“Taylor Rule” Stanford economist John Taylor Prescribing how Fed should set rate targets Fairly accurate in describing Fed target setting 1983-2007 Target Fed Funds Rate = 2 + 0.5*(Actual Inflation – Target Inflation) + 0.5*(Actual GDP – Potential GDP) “2” comes from long run average “real” rate TR: Lower FF Target when GDP growth below target (+ reverse) TR: Raise FF Target when economy inflation above target ( + reverse) Implies FF Target driving other short term rates ▪ (Effective Fed Funds, Tbill Rates, Commercial Paper Rates)
6
Fisher Equation Market Rates = Real Rates + Expected Inflation Expected inflation influenced by inflation and market perceptions of Fed actions For expected inflation: Nominal Treasury Rate – TIPS Rate Inflation/Expectations can swamp Fed actions: 1970s: Fed expands money to lower unemployment but …
9
Fisher Equation Market Rates = Real Rates + Expected Inflation Real rates reflect supply/demand for credit Influenced by economic growth (higher when growth higher) ▪ Estimate of Real Rate: See TIPS Rates (See Bloomberg Rates)(See Bloomberg Rates) Markets can pull Fed FF Target, not just pushed by it
11
Worldwide Fiscal-Monetary Problems
13
Expected PV of Liabilities < = Expected PV of Assets Liabilities = Money + Bonds Assets = Discounted PV Expected Tax Revenue – Spending When Markets Come to Evaluate M + B growth as much larger than Present Value of (Tax Revenue - Spending) Debt-Currency-Inflation Crisis ▪ Germany 1920s, Mexico 1990s, Greece 2011 (no local currency) Views/markets tend to switch all at once – “Peso Problem”
14
Debt/GDP ratio useful but Future GDP growth (tax revenues) Possible future spending reductions Demand for currency-debt matters in determining rates/interest payments Outlook/Evaluation Spain, Italy, Ireland, … France Japan U.S.
15
Implication: U.S. Treasuries
20
Cheap Credit Public Sector Backing (Fannie, Freddie, Homeownership) High Leverage (Assets/Equity) for Investment Banks (Bear, Lehman, Merrill …) + AIG Banks Lending on 25 years of growth/repayment Foreign Investment in US NOTARIETY BUT TOO SMALL ▪ Securitization (Collateralized Debt: CDOs) ▪ Derivatives (Credit Default Swaps) ▪ Market-to-Market Accounting
21
Mortgage-related securities marked-to-market daily Immediately begin to reflect deteriorating conditions in 2007 Commercial loans on bank books valued by banks at their PV of expected cash flow Widespread writing down of these loans doesn’t begin until 2009, giving appearance that mortgage market problems causing these problems Problems already developing coincidental with mortgage problems in 2007-08
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.