chapter 16: monetary policy tools. 1. the federal funds market and reserves central banks have three...
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Chapter 16: Monetary Policy Tools
1. The Federal Funds Market and Reserves
Central banks have three primary tools for influencing the money supply
Money supply
Reserve requirement
Discount loans
Open market operations
1. The Federal Funds Market and Reserves
The reserve requirementworks through the money multiplier,
constraining multiple deposit expansion the larger it becomes.
Central banks today rarely use it because most banks work around reserve requirements.
1. The Federal Funds Market and Reserves
Discount loans influence the monetary base (MB = C + R).
Discount loans depend on banks (or non-bank borrowers, where applicable)
first borrowing, then repaying loans.
The central bank does not have precise control over MB.
1. The Federal Funds Market and Reserves
Open market operationsinfluence the monetary base (MB = C + R).
Open market operations (OMO) are generally preferred. The central bank can easily
expand or contract MB to a precise level. Using OMO, central banks can also reverse mistakes quickly.
1. The Federal Funds Market and Reserves
The Fed Funds Market: banks that need reserves can borrow them from banks that hold reserves they don’t need.
Overnight bank borrowing
Fed Funds Market Lower rates
Directly from Fed
Higher rates
More Fed scrutiny
1. The Federal Funds Market and Reserves
If Fed Funds rate < discount rate, banks borrow in Fed Funds Market
If Fed Funds rate > discount rate,Arbitrage:
Borrow at discount window/Lend in Fed Funds Market
The discount rate sets an upper limit to ff* (the actual Fed Funds rate) because no bank would borrow reserves at a higher rate in the federal funds market than it could borrow directly from
the Fed.
2. Open Market Operations and the Discount Window
Open market activity decisions: DailyFRBNY researches:• The level of reserves• The Fed Funds target• The actual market Fed Funds rate• Expectations regarding float• Treasury activities• Treasury market conditions – primary dealers, specialized firms, and banks
2. Open Market Operations and the Discount Window
Open market activity decisions: Each day,FRBNY determines buy or sell:• Outright– securities permanently join or leave Fed’s balance
sheet
• Repo (Repurchase agreement)– purchase with a guarantee that seller will
repurchase
• Reverse repo (matched sale-purchase transaction)– sell with guarantee that buyer will resell to Fed
2. Open Market Operations and the Discount Window
Discount windowis today primarily a backup facility used during crises when the federal funds market might not function
effectively. As lender of last resort, the Fed has a responsibility to
ensure that banks can obtain as much as they want to borrow provided they can post what in normal
times would be considered good collateral security.
2. Open Market Operations and the Discount Window
Discount windowAs lender of last resort, the Fed has a responsibility to ensure
that banks can obtain as much as they want to borrowProvided they can maintain good collateral security
To ensure that banks do not rely too heavily on the discount window:
• discount rate is usually set a full percentage point above ff*, a “penalty” of 100 basis points
2. Open Market Operations and the Discount Window
Discount window: Crisis of 2008Federal Reserve invoked its emergency powers to create additional lending
powers and programs, including:
• Term Auction Facility (TAF), a “credit facility” that allows depository institutions to bid for short term funds at a rate established by auction
• Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF), which provides overnight loans to primary dealers at the discount rate
• Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLF) also helps primary dealers by exchanging Treasuries for riskier collateral for 28-day periods
• Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Liquidity Facility, which helps money market mutual funds to meet redemptions without having to sell their assets into distressed markets
2. Open Market Operations and the Discount Window
Discount window: Crisis of 2008Federal Reserve invoked its emergency powers to create additional lending
powers and programs, including:
• Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF) allows the FRBNY, through a special purpose vehicle (SPV), to purchase commercial paper (short term bonds) issued by non-financial corporations
• Money Market Investor Funding Facility (MMIFF) is another lending program designed to help the money markets (markets for short term bonds) return to normal
2. Open Market Operations and the Discount Window
• The financial crisis also induced the Fed to engage in several rounds of “quantitative easing” or Large Scale Asset Purchases (LSAP)– Goals:
1. increase the prices of (decrease the yields of) Treasury bonds and the other financial assets purchased
2. influence the money supply directly.
• Due to LSAP, the Fed’s balance sheet swelled from less than a trillion dollars in early 2008 to about 3 trillion in just a year http://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/bst_recenttrends.htm
2. Open Market Operations and the Discount Window
The Discount windowis also used to provide moderately shaky banks a longer-term source of credit at an even higher penalty rate .5 percentage (50 basis) points above the regular discount rate.
3. The Monetary Policy Tools of Other Central Banks
Federal Reserve• Uses Open Market
Operations (OMO) to manage overnight interbank rates
• Uses outright purchases, repos, and reverse repos
• Lends at marginal lending rates
• Pays interest on reserves
European Central Bank• Uses Open Market
Operations (OMO) to manage overnight interbank rates
• Uses outright purchases, repos, and reverse repos
• Lends at marginal lending rates
• Pays interest on reserves