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.
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, 27 June 2014
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.