The ECB and the option of large-scale asset purchases

Large-scale asset purchases have become a plausible policy option for the European Central Bank. A BNP research report suggests that an initial meaningful program could require purchases worth 3-5% of euro area GDP. A program of that size would have to focus on the sovereign bond market, with the acquisition of private-sector assets possibly featuring as a complement.

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Tracking the history of sovereign defaults

Bank of Canada has assembled a new broad database on global public debt default. It shows that after sovereign delinquency had exceeded 5% of outstanding debt in the 1980s, it declined alongside falling interest rates to below 1% in the 2000s and has remained low despite the global financial and euro sovereign crises. In a longer (200 year) context sovereign default ratios have moved in long cycles, each stretching over several decades.

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Time-varying macroprudential policy

Persistent highly accommodative monetary policy in the U.S. raises fears of building systemic vulnerabilities. Federal Reserve board member Tarullo has discussed the use of time-varying macroprudential policy as a means to contain these risks and to allow monetary policy to keep rates low for longer. This policy has many limitations, however.

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Europe’s bank-sovereign nexus (revisited)

A Bank of Italy paper illustrates and explains the rise in European banks’ sovereign debt holding since the great financial crisis. It also reiterates structural causes for bank-sovereign feedback loops. One would conclude that this nexus remains an important factor for market dynamics and monetary policy.

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The impact of high public debt on economic growth

Academic work suggests that public debt above 90% of GDP is a drag for GDP growth. This would apply to the developed world today. However, a new IMF paper based on a broad panel of countries going back to 1875 qualifies this rule. It suggests that high debt does not per se reduce growth. Only if debt levels are both elevated and rising, growth tends to suffer. On its own high debt does often entail greater output volatility, however.

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Shadow banking and the backstop problem

Modern shadow banking provides large-scale risk transformation services that are highly pro-cyclical (view post here). This is a systemic concern mainly for one reason: most shadow banking activities lack formal transparent backstops, i.e. external risk absorption mechanisms that prevent large negative shocks from escalating.

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High-speed trading: lessons from quantum physics

Modern physics teaches that objects behave differently as they reach the speed of light. This has become relevant for financial market execution. While prices pretend to be global, in reality they depend on location. Liquidity at any given price is uncertain. And physical location becomes critical for the success of certain trading styles. Moreover, quantum physics suggest that ‘freak events’ that destabilize the markets are likely to occur.

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Developed market bond yields and systemic EM risk

A new BIS paper argues that the expansion of EM local-currency bond markets and foreign-currency EM corporate issuance have strengthened the link between local EM financial conditions and global bond yields. The consequences would be (i) increased dependence of emerging financial systems on developed countries’ non-conventional monetary policies, (ii) decreased effectiveness of local monetary policies, and (iii) new systemic risks.

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The rise and risks of central counterparty clearing

A brief speech by ECB governing council member Benoît Cœuré summarizes problematic side effects of increased central counterparty clearing in derivatives markets. Systemic threats may arise from unprecedented risk concentrations in a few global central counterparties and participating banks, as well as from the mutualisation of losses and liquidity shortfalls across systemically important institutions.

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Estimating China’s augmented fiscal debt and deficit

The IMF, like other institutions, estimates that China’s fiscal position is much weaker than suggested by headline statistics. A new paper sees the augmented fiscal debt at around to 45% of GDP and the augmented fiscal deficit at close to 10% of GDP. Financial stability risks arise from dependence on a favorable ratio of growth to real interest rates, the reliance of local budgets on real estate sales, and the refinancing of local government financing vehicles’ debt.

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