The limitations of ECB bond purchases

The European Central Bank’s public sector bond purchases are sizeable and their pace may increase further. However, issue and issuer limits constrain their time horizon. For monetary easing to remain credible and powerful the purchase of uncovered bank bonds and corporate bonds may have to be considered.

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The impact of the ECB asset purchase programme

ECB research suggests that its 2015 asset purchase programme significantly compressed term and credit spreads. Unlike previous asset purchases, it did not tackle financial distress. It functioned mainly through the broad compression of risk premia and spill-over to non-targeted assets.

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An updated guide to ECB non-conventional monetary policy

The ECB now runs one of the most complex monetary policy regimes. Beyond regular liquidity supply, its operating framework features long-term full-allotment refinancing operations, generous collateral acceptance, and a commitment to conditional open-ended interventions in sovereign markets. Subsequently, it has adopted or expanded forward guidance, targeted lending and large-scale outright asset purchases.

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ECB asset purchases: key points to memorize

The ECB 2015/16 asset purchase program will include sovereign and quasi sovereign debt, ABS, and covered bonds. The envisaged annualized pace of balance sheet expansion should be around 6% of GDP. Pace and size are conditional on inflation expectations and open-ended, subject to restrictions on market size and issuer quality. The absence of full loss sharing could limit benefits for sovereign credit risk.

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The ECB’s quantitative and qualititative easing

The ECB has introduced a set of new policies that emulate quantitative and qualitative easing. Key measures are targeted long-term repo operations, asset-backed securities purchases, and covered bond purchases. The total net balance sheet expansion is expected to be at least 8% of euro area GDP over two years. Additional asset purchase programmes for corporate and sovereign bonds are possible in order to secure sufficient accommodation and to respond to contingencies.

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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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A lecture in euro area money markets

Paul Mercier, principal adviser at the ECB, has summarized the basics and recent history of euro area money markets. His tale emphasizes what investors often miss. First, the ECB balance sheet and excess liquidity are poor measures of lending conditions. Second, the great financial crisis has generated a structural rise in banks’ borrowing from the Eurosystem, over and above their liquidity needs. Third, full allotment policies in conjunction with (sub-) zero deposit rates have led to large and potentially volatile excess reserve holdings.

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Understanding the ECB’s latest tool: TLTROs

On 5 June 2014 the European Central Bank announced Targeted Long-Term Repo Operations (TLTROs]. Their main purpose is to stimulate bank lending to non-financial corporations. The operations would offer conditional cheap funding to banks in large size and for maturities of up to four years. Private loan conditions should ease in response, particularly in the euro area periphery, but the impact on area-wide credit is uncertain. Also, TLTROs might effectively be used for government bond carry trades.

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An ECB review of forward guidance

The ECB has reviewed its own forward guidance in a global context. Forward guidance uses communication [i] to add monetary accommodation at the zero bound for policy rates and [ii] to contain interest rate volatility. The ECB sees its own version as ‘form of qualitative guidance conditional on a narrative’. It is a commitment to keep policy rates very low over a flexible horizon, based on a wide array of indicators supporting a subdued inflation outlook over the medium term. This is different from the Federal Reserve or the Bank of England, which use more quantitative outcome-based forward guidance.

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Target2 and the euro area crisis

Target2 is the real-time gross settlement system of the Eurosystem. It allows central banks to redress reserve losses that result from balance of payment deficits. A working paper of the University of Siena illustrates how Target2 prevented the euro area sovereign crisis from escalating into large-scale defaults and devaluations. Limitations to Target2 could downgrade the monetary union to a fixed exchange rate regime, if international flows become large enough.

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