Underestimated effects of the termination of QE and forward guidance

It is evident that non-conventional Fed policy has contributed to long-term yield compression. It is less evident how this exactly worked and what will happen when the Fed tries to terminate QE and forward guidance. A new IMF paper supports evidence for two underestimated effects. First, to maintain existing stimulus the Fed must constantly announce new asset purchases or holding period extensions. Second, the stimulus from asset purchases depends on forward rate guidance and hence may decrease when the latter ceases.

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The global leverage problem

On aggregate, global financial leverage has further increased since the great financial crisis. Most worrisome is the declining debt service capacity of public and private borrowers due to falling potential GDP growth and inflation. This precarious development virtually enforces very low real interest rates. EM leverage has increased fastest in recent years. China in particular poses maybe the greatest global debt problem.

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A refresher of European banking union and AQR

Nicolas Veron explains European banking union and its acronyms. The two main pillars are the SSM (Single Supervisory Mechanism), run by the ECB, and the SRM (Single Resolution Mechanism), run by the SRB (Single Resolution Board). Before taking up its new role next month, the ECB will publish a stress test and an AQR (Asset Quality Review). The new framework is expected to ease the home bias of banking regulation and the sovereign-bank “doom loops”. Deficiencies include a lack of area-wide deposit insurance and insufficient resolution funds.

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How to hike U.S. federal funds rates in a glut of liquidity

Asset purchase programs have left the U.S. banking system with USD2.9 trn in (mostly excess) reserves. Raising the target federal funds rate in this predicament relies primarily on increases in the interest rate paid on excess reserves. Moreover, in order to secure a sufficiently pervasive impact, overnight reverse repurchase agreements will likely play an important role. Their exact form will influence whether or not the target floor on money market rates will be “leaky”.

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The pitfalls of emerging markets asset management

Dedicated EM exposure has surged by over 55% since 2007, with assets concentrated on few managers. A new BIS article points out that trading flows are correlated due to the widespread use of benchmarks. Moreover, EM asset prices and final investor flows have been pro-cyclical and mutually reinforcing. These patterns seem conducive to recurrent market dislocations.

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Regulatory tightening: the basics and the basic risks

Financial regulatory tightening implies to some extent mutation of systemic risk. Thus, elevated bank capital requirements raise incentives for regulatory arbitrage and shadow banking. Liquidity regulation and OTC derivatives reform inflate holdings of government securities and help accommodating high public debt. And the emergence of central banks financial stability mandates and macroprudential policies may create misplaced confidence in crude and untested macro management tools. 

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The impact of non-conventional monetary policy on banks

Non-conventional monetary policy seems to benefit banks’ balance sheets. After all, it offers cheap refinancing and credit market support. However, an empirical analysis by Lambert and Ueda casts doubt on that belief. Market measures of bank credit risk have mostly deteriorated in episodes of policy stimulus. Easy monetary policy has been encouraging risk-weighted asset accumulation and discouraging balance sheet repair.

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The Federal Reserve’s increased influence on financial markets

A new empirical study suggests that the Federal Reserve has exerted a stronger influence on fixed income, commodity, and currency markets since it started using non-conventional monetary policy. This is not because monetary policy shocks have been larger, but because their transmission has become more powerful and pervasive.

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The basic mechanics of shadow banking

Shadow banking creates liquidity outside the regulated banking system. Unlike traditional money, shadow money is constrained by the value of assets that serve as collateral. Therefore, shadow banking is vulnerable to market price declines. As shown in a new paper by Moreira and Savov, pro-cyclicality is compounded by collateral values falling more than asset prices when uncertainty is rising. This makes modern financial systems prone to collateral runs and liquidity crises.

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Japan’s war against deflation: progress and risks

More than a year after its launch, the impact of “quantitative and qualitative easing” seems pervasive. The Bank of Japan asserts that the output gap has closed, that inflation expectations have increased, and that the conquest of deflation would be in sight. The policy board has maintained its commitment to the 2% inflation target through forward guidance and large-scale JGB purchases. However, without successful fiscal consolidation and supply side reforms this policy poses new serious risks.

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