It is a recurrent phenomenon that liquidity gets more valuable at the end of the year: this is seen in the fact that, notwithstanding the higher amount outstanding, the overnight money market rate (EONIA) increases in the last weeks of the year. While the phenomenon was suppressed during the crisis by the overabundant liquidity provision, before the crisis, the average increase between the beginning of December and the end of the year, was of the order of 36 basis points, concentrated in the last few days of the month (see table 1).
A blog by Francesco Papadia, providing a personal perspective on monetary policy developments drawing from an experience of 40 years in critical positions in central banking.
Redirect
The blog has moved.
You should be automatically redirected in 5 seconds. If not, visit
redirectLink" href='http://moneymatters-monetarypolicy.eu/'> http://moneymatters-monetarypolicy.eu/
and update your bookmarks.
Friday, 20 December 2013
Monday, 16 December 2013
Should German workers be paid more? Or, Do we have an omitted variable bias?
A recurrent problem in
regression analysis is the omitted variable bias: if you estimate a regression
and you do not include on the right side a variable that belongs to the model
and is correlated with some included variables, the OLS estimates will be biased.
The gist of this post is whether we have something of an analogous problem in
addressing the current macroeconomic problems in the €-area, namely by not
considering the possible influence of income distribution.
Friday, 29 November 2013
Should the European Central Bank do more and go negative?
The European Central Bank is torn between those who say that it is already doing too much, mostly in Germany, and those who say it should do more. One of the actions the ECB should pursue, in the opinion of the latter group, is to bring the deposit rate into negative territory.
Monday, 18 November 2013
Is the price stability target of the ECB at risk?
Get me right. I am not fearing, for the time being, that inflation will move above the 2.0 per cent ECB target. Of course, it would be wrong to assume that inflation is dead and can never come back and the central bank must be symmetrically alert to all deviations from price stability. Too high inflation is not, however, the risk against which to guard in the foreseeable future. The issue I want to explore here is whether there is a risk of inflation remaining too low for too long. This issue is germane to the risk of "Japanification", which has started to be discussed in the market.
Tuesday, 12 November 2013
…and what about the other side of the pond?
While on this side of the Atlantic the ECB was reacting more quickly than expected to the much weaker inflation prospects, I was in the US trying to better understand what is happening over there in the monetary area.
On the basis of the talks I had, I came back with a number of thoughts, which were not necessarily shared by my interlocutors but were stimulated by the discussions I had with them.
Wednesday, 30 October 2013
Forget the € and demand management!
The title of this post is a bit
exaggerated, yet it helps stressing the gist of the point I want to
make: policy makers, market participants and ordinary citizens should start devoting less
attention to the € and to demand management and should concentrate, instead,
on supply issues.
Let me expand a little this basic idea.
Thursday, 17 October 2013
Who said what on the euro?
The euro and Nobel prizes
The contemporaneous award of the Economics Nobel prize to Eugen Fama and Robert Shiller, who have reached quite opposite conclusions on the ability of financial market to always generate prices consistent with economic fundamentals, has, in some quarters, raised doubts about the wisdom of those who decide the Nobel prizes. These doubts are at least late and probably wrong.
Tuesday, 8 October 2013
Don´t supply more when there is no demand!
Over the last few weeks the words uttered by the ECB President, first in front of the European Parliament and then in the latest press conference, according to which the ECB is: "ready to use all available instruments, including a LTRO (longer-term refinancing operation), to ensure that developments in short-term money market rates are in line with our medium-term assessment of price stability." have attracted a lot of market attention.
Monday, 30 September 2013
German elections ‘positive for the euro’
Whatever the coalition outcome, Germans back the single currency |
[Published today in the OMFIF Bulletin]
Tuesday, 24 September 2013
Has Bernanke provided a helping hand to Draghi?
In a previous post I stressed the tug of
war between the Governing Council of the ECB and the money market: the former
has a unanimous intention to keep the monetary policy stance constant or
looser, the latter seems well poised to increase interest rates.
In this tug of war, Bernanke has been seen by some as having started
to pull on the ECB side with the utterly surprising Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) decision not to "taper" the 85 billion of monthly
purchases of bonds by the FED.
Etichete:
ECB,
exit strategies,
FED,
Quantitative easing,
Tapering
Monday, 16 September 2013
Upward bias vs. downward bias: who will win?
ECB President Draghi confirmed, at the last press conference on September 5th, the unanimous view of the Governing Council: “we wanted to make it clear that we have a downward bias in interest rates for an extended period of time.“ He also said that “The Governing Council confirms that it expects the key ECB interest rates to remain at present or lower levels for an extended period of time. “
Monday, 9 September 2013
A China-USA monetary Union?
Much has been made, while discussing the
euro-area crisis, of the fact that countries using the euro have lost the
ability to correct their imbalances through changes in nominal exchange rates.
So, taking the most extreme example, Greece could not devalue its exchange rate
towards Germany to deal with its imbalances. The statement is of course
correct, but needs three qualifications.
Thursday, 22 August 2013
“Forward with forward guidance!” OR “Much ado about nothing?
Many central
banks in advanced economies have engaged in some form of forward guidance. The
latest to tread this path was the Bank of England, which was preceded by the Reserve
Bank of New Zealand, the Bank of Japan, the Fed, the Norges Bank, the Sveriges
Riksbank, the Czech National Bank, the Bank of Canada and the European Central
Bank. Also the Swiss National Bank has lately, if somewhat implicitly, had
recourse to forward guidance.
Thursday, 8 August 2013
Hurray, a crisis!
The European phase of
the Great Recession that started in May 2010 has produced huge damage: ask
unemployed youngsters in Spain, the Exchequer in Ireland, banks in Italy and
about everybody in Greece. There are two categories of people, however, that
could welcome it: economists and naïve Europhiles.
Wednesday, 31 July 2013
Is the ECB a central bank overburdened with risk?
The short
answer is: yes, but not of the kind you think.
The long answer starts by noting that in some quarters the financial risk coming from unconventional monetary policies is advanced as a reason for more caution (or cowardice?). For instance, the Bundesbank in the document on the OMT presented to the German Constitutional Federal Court gave quite some weight to this issue [1].
Wednesday, 24 July 2013
Cimabue and Giotto, the Bundesbank and the ECB: an analogy?
Cimabue is defined by the Encyclopaedia Britannica as “the last great
Italian artist in the Byzantine style”,
while in the web-site of the Louvre one reads that Giotto "has been seen down the centuries as the instigator of a painting revolution without precedent since ancient times". Dante Alighieri
in his Divina Commedia so defines the relationship between the two painters: “Credette Cimabue ne la pittura tener lo campo, e ora ha Giotto il
grido,
sì che la fama di colui è scura”, which can be translated in
English as “Cimabue
thought to
hold the field in painting, and now Giotto hath the cry.”
Etichete:
Bundesbank,
ECB,
Inflation expectations,
Price stability
Sunday, 21 July 2013
Target balances and the risk of another "Reparations" problem
The
crisis that started in 2007, threatened the global economy with the demise of
Lehman Brothers in the Autumn of 2008 and moved to Europe in the Spring of
2010, where it is still not surpassed, has shaken the trust of laymen and
economists alike in the ability of economics to predict and manage events. The
analogy with physics as a science and engineering as a technique has been found
wanting.
Tuesday, 9 July 2013
Feydeau, Bernanke and Draghi
Georges Feydeau was a master in his theatre pieces to make actors enter and exit doors, as in a ballet, causing great laughter in the audience.
Also Bernanke and Draghi are busy with exits, albeit
in opposite directions and causing much less laughter.
Bernanke started communicating to the market that it
should not expect the FED to always ease further and that before too long it
should slow down and eventually exit from adding to its portfolio of securities.
Monday, 8 July 2013
Draghi is dancing on the brink of a further rate reduction.
While Bernanke has started his difficult footwork
towards the exit, Draghi has engaged in a minuet of his own to signal that the
exit is far into the future and that indeed further ease could come. The
ranking of the FED and the ECB in terms of monetary policy ease has changed, or
at least is changing, with interesting possible consequences for exchange
markets. Factor in Kuroda and Carney for some further entertainment coming from
central banks in the foreseeable future.