Last March I published a post [1] the conclusion of which was: "... the bottom line of this post is that we may, before too long, see the ECB and national macro-prudential agents in Germany and in other countries where there are more pressing financial stability concerns actively engaging in trying in earnest the macro prudential route." This prediction did not come true as yet, still I think we are moving closer to it. Indeed, macro-prudential measures are invoked more and more often to deal with the dilemma created by the need to keep interest rates close to the un-natural, zero bound (and even negative, in the case of the ECB) to fight too low inflation, while fearing its negative effects on financial stability.
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.
Thursday, 10 July 2014
Tuesday, 1 July 2014
The ECB is not like the mythical "one handed economist".
The assessments going around about the package of measures decided by the ECB at its last meeting at the beginning of June are definitely mixed. Some observers are more optimistic than others about its effect, in particular about its ability to remedy the gradual erosion of inflationary expectations and thus reconfirm the achievement by the ECB of its own price stability objective.
Friday, 27 June 2014
Guessing ECB liquidity until the first Targeted Longer Term Refinancing Operation
The position of money market rates in the €-area within the corridor recently set by the ECB (-10 to + 15 basis points) depends on the outstanding amount of excess liquidity demanded by banks, and is thus not under the direct control of the ECB. It is thus useful to try and guess what excess liquidity could do between now and the first Targeted Longer Term Refinancing Operation (TLTRO) in September. In principle one could follow either a bottom up or a top down approach to carry out this exercise.
Tuesday, 17 June 2014
A fair chance for the European Central Bank
In a couple of tweets I published on the
occasion of the last press conference of the ECB president on June 5th, I gave
my first assessment of the package of measures decided by the ECB: not
overwhelming. Overall the market seemed to share this assessment as the
exchange rate hardly moved while short term rates (Euribor, OIS and Bubills) only came down in a limited way (Chart1).
Monday, 2 June 2014
An enticing Very Long Term Refinancing Operation from the ECB
Since the last press conference of the ECB President, several members of the Governing Council have confirmed that the ECB is preparing a package of measures to be decided at the next meeting of the Governing Council. I have given my sense of what could be the content of this package, as well as its interest rate consequences, in a previous post [1]. In a more recent Tweet I have increased the probability, up from 60 per cent, of a negative deposit rate being part of the package.
Tuesday, 20 May 2014
Where could ECB interest rates go?
A
quasi announcement
Economics is mostly
quantitative, being dominated by mathematics in its theoretical framework and
by econometrics in its empirical one. Central banking seems instead to be
dominated by a literary approach. In July 2012 the “Whatever” utterances by
Draghi contributed to change the path of the € crisis. In the last press
conference, his statement about the Governing Council being “comfortable” in
acting at the subsequent policy meeting sent a clear message that the ECB
convinced itself, not too early in the view of about everybody else, that
something had to be done to counter the gradual dis-anchoring of inflationary
expectations [1].
Thursday, 8 May 2014
Is the ECB really so generous?
A simplified, to the point of being simplistic,
approach to understanding the transmission of monetary policy to the real
economy consists of three basic links:
- The central bank fixes, or at least strongly influences, the marginal cost of bank funding through its interest rates;
- Banks equalise the expected marginal cost of their own funding to the marginal revenue from lending;
- Firms, households and the external sector, in the latter case through the exchange rate, increase or decrease aggregate demand, and ultimately prices, in line with the cost of bank lending.
Tuesday, 29 April 2014
Titus Maccius Plautus and the EU Troika
The Roman comic playwright Titus Maccius Plautus takes up an old adage of Greek origin when he writes in his Bacchides: "Quem di diligent, adolescens moritur", which translated into English sounds: "Whom the gods love die young". This is of course a paradox: the empirical proof that gods do not make a favour to those they love by making them die young is the fact that large shares of national income are devoted to maintaining or regaining health, in view of a long life. But, taking the same paradoxical line as Plautus, I am tempted to say: "Happy the countries that had the troika!"
Tuesday, 15 April 2014
Some unpleasant Quantitative Easing Arithmetic
Some 30 years ago Thomas Sargent and Neil Wallace published an article [1] that raised the possibility of tight monetary policy leading to inflation. Salvatore Rossi and I showed that this result was due to a questionably formulated public budget constraint in their model [2] and basically salvaged the traditional result that it is loose monetary policy that leads to inflation.
The link between that old story and Quantitative Easing is that there is something unpleasant about Quantitative Easing arithmetic, at least for those market observers that, with some justification, interpret recent ECB message as pre-announcement of some exercise of this sort.
Friday, 4 April 2014
Is the €-area in 2014 like Japan on the dawn of deflation?
If you are impatient and somewhat trust my judgment, let me give first my synthetic answer to the title question: out of the five criteria I use to compare the current situation in the €-area to that in Japan at the end of the ´90s, two (current situation of the banking sector and inflationary expectations) do not indicate that the €-area is in a better position than Japan when it was about to enter its deflationary period. On one other criterion (central bank activism) there is a slight advantage for the ECB. On the two last criteria (the prospective cleaning up of the banking sector and demography) the situation in the € area is clearly better than it was in Japan. Overall, my sense is that, in particular taking into account the recent hesitations of the ECB to confront too low inflation, confirmed in the last press conference, and the now weakly anchoring of inflationary expectations, one cannot exclude a significant risk of Japanification for the €-area.
Thursday, 27 March 2014
Partiam, partiamo or the ECB communication
In the "Atto secondo, Scena IV" of Verdi`s opera, La Forza del Destino, there is a famous choir which keeps singing "partiam, partiam, partiamo" (let's leave, let's leave, let's leave) while remaining stubbornly on the scene, without making deeds follow words.
I cannot help recalling this scene while observing the communication from the ECB.
It is a few months, since November of last year when it last reduced rates, that the ECB is sending the message that it is ready to reinforce its action to symmetrically pursue its objective of "close but lower than 2.0% percent in the medium term", while not actually following up with action.
Tuesday, 18 March 2014
From firmly to weakly anchored, or the importance of an adverb!
Four months ago I published a post with the title: Is the price stability target of the ECB at risk? In it I explored the risk of inflation remaining too low for too long in the €-area.
My conclusion was: ”yes, there is a risk for the price stability objective, but the probability of this unfavourable development is low if the ECB will use its tools appropriately.” In light of the lack of action by the ECB in March, even when projecting inflation remaining well below its objective of “close but below 2.0% in the medium run” for the fourth year, it is useful to review the issue and update the answer.
Monday, 10 March 2014
Macro-prudential: if not now when?
At the turn of 2000, when the € was at 0.85, very weak, against the dollar, the then Economic Counselor of the International Monetary Fund, Michael Mussa, issued a statement that made some waves in the monetary world: "if not now when?" [1]. With that statement he made the point that if there was a time when a central bank had to resort to the unusual step of intervening in the foreign exchange market, that time had arrived for the European Central Bank.
Monday, 24 February 2014
Galileo Galilei and the €-crisis
Just a few days it ago was the 450th anniversary of the birth of Galileo Galilei and this suggested me a comparison with the €-crisis.
Legend says that when Galileo Galilei exited, on the 22nd of June of 1633, from Santa Maria sopra Minerva, in Rome, where the Catholic church held a process against him, he pronounced the famous sentence: “And yet, it moves”, referring to the fact that, contrary to the view of the then majority of people, it was the earth that moves around the sun and not the opposite. Since that day, the case of Galileo Galilei has become the archetypal case to demonstrate that the majority, even when supported by a strong institution such as the catholic church, is not always necessarily right.
Legend says that when Galileo Galilei exited, on the 22nd of June of 1633, from Santa Maria sopra Minerva, in Rome, where the Catholic church held a process against him, he pronounced the famous sentence: “And yet, it moves”, referring to the fact that, contrary to the view of the then majority of people, it was the earth that moves around the sun and not the opposite. Since that day, the case of Galileo Galilei has become the archetypal case to demonstrate that the majority, even when supported by a strong institution such as the catholic church, is not always necessarily right.
Thursday, 13 February 2014
When will it be "1989" in China?
Many market commentators are trying to assess whether China will manage to fully implement the decisions of the Third Plenary Session of the 18th Communist Party of China Central Committee, held from 9th to 12th of November 2013. The top of the Communist Party seems to be convinced that, as former Premier Wen Jiabao said, the Chinese economy is fundamentally unbalanced and needs a significant redirection [1].
Thursday, 6 February 2014
Emerging Market turmoil and the canary in the coal mine
There was a time when developments in Emerging Markets (EM) mattered a lot for them, but much less for the rest of the world, as they were too small and too isolated to really influence the global economy. These days are long gone: Chart 1 shows that in the eighties the share of EM in the global economy was still only a half of that of Developed Markets (DM), now the EM are slightly bigger than the DM economies in aggregate terms and the trend is forecast to continue.
Tuesday, 28 January 2014
A cobweb in the Eurotower
Eurotower is the name of the building
currently hosting the European Central Bank, waiting to move into its new
premises later in the year, but it is not that the cleaning people in the
Eurotower are not serious about their job: the cobweb I refer to in the title is the one
presented in old microeconomic textbooks.
Monday, 20 January 2014
Should the ECB go quantitative?
Many commentators either
complain that the European Central Bank has not followed the FED, the Bank of
England and the Bank of Japan on the Quantitative Easing (QE) path of purchasing
very large amounts of securities or, more kindly, advice the ECB to go that way,
to more forcefully fight the risk of too low inflation [1].
Etichete:
ECB,
exit strategies,
FED,
Forward guidance,
Quantitative easing
Tuesday, 14 January 2014
Trust in Europe paid handsomely!
Over the first few days of January, the prices of sovereign bonds of peripheral €-area countries have recorded large increases. This has been matched by positive developments in market access and issuance. In some market commentaries these developments were noted with something of a surprised tone (for having made wrong forecasts about the demise of the €?). Such surprise is indeed surprising, since the posting of large gains by sovereign peripheral bonds is a persistent development that has brought large capital gains to those investors, included the ECB, which bought peripheral bonds when their prices were stressed.[1]
Friday, 3 January 2014
Three liquidity scenarios after the year-end.
There are 3 main scenarios that could
develop in the liquidity and money market in the €-area at the beginning of
2014, after the tensions at the end of 2013.
First, tensions could
dissipate since the reinforced year-end effect has gone.