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Chapter 5. The Behavior of Interest Rates The statement was approved on a 10-2 vote. James Bullard, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, objected for the first time this year, saying he wanted a stronger commitment from the Fed to keep inflation from falling too low.
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Chapter 5 The Behavior of Interest Rates The statement was approved on a 10-2 vote. James Bullard, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, objected for the first time this year, saying he wanted a stronger commitment from the Fed to keep inflation from falling too low. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-10-05/treasuries-rise-for-second-day-as-bernanke-says-purchases-support-economy.html http://www.cnbc.com/id/101045968 http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-18/dollar-trades-near-7-month-low-versus-euro-as-fed-avoids-taper.html http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/O/OIL_PRICES?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2013-09-19-06-02-15 http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/markets/2013/09/18/wall-street-in-rally-mode-on-fed-taper-news/2833531/ http://www.proactiveinvestors.com/companies/news/48051/gold-gets-hit-with-fed-pow-wow-in-view-more-hurt-ahead-48051.html http://data.cnbc.com/quotes/.DJI/tab/2 http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?play=1&video=3000200725 http://www.nasdaq.com/article/markets-spike-on-syria-fedrace-developments-cm276991 http://www.newsking.us/news-5042577-Afternoon:-US-stocks-rose-narrowed-imminent-Fed-statement.html http://www.abc12.com/story/23468488/the-fed-maintains-bond-purchasing-program http://wiki.mises.org/wiki/Money_and_banking_in_Ancient_Rome http://www.lewrockwell.com/2009/07/erik-voorhees/the-record-of-the-federal-reserve/ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iYZM58dulPE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3PKHVbOet8 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2X5K8NzeFgE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9DH07MBG_w http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6RWWWjE2Rc http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15idnfuyqXs http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXqc-yyoVKg http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJDQOF_H8kI
Bond Demand The quantity of bonds demanded increases as p falls. P D B
Bond Demand The quantity of bonds demanded increases as p falls. Bond demand increases in • Expected return relative to other assets • Liquidity relative to other assets • Wealth P D B
Bond Demand For 1-year discount bonds held for 1 year, R = i The quantity of bonds demanded increases as p falls. Bond demand increases in • Expected return relative to other assets • Liquidity relative to other assets • Wealth Bond demand decreases in • Riskiness relative to other assets • Expected inflation • Expected interest rate Expected return relative to other assets P D B
Bond Supply The quantity of bonds supplied increases as p rises. P S B
Bond Supply The quantity of bonds supplied increases as p rises. Bond supply increases in • Expected profitability of investment opportunities • Expected inflation • Government budget deficits P S B
Supply and Demand Excess supply: the price suppliers are asking for is too high P D 95 S B 15 25
Supply and Demand Excess supply: the price suppliers are asking for is too high • For a zero-coupon $100 bond held for one year P i D 100 95 5.3 95 S B 15 25
Supply and Demand Equilibrium: the quantities of bonds supplied and demanded equal • For a zero-coupon $100 bond held for one year P i D 95 5.3 92 S B 15 25 20
Supply and Demand Equilibrium: the quantities of bonds supplied and demanded equal • For a zero-coupon $100 bond held for one year P i D 95 5.3 100 92 8.7 92 S B 20
Supply and Demand Excess demand: the price suppliers are asking for is low • For a zero-coupon $100 bond held for one year P i D 95 5.3 92 8.7 90 S B 15 25
Supply and Demand Excess demand: the price suppliers are asking for is low • For a zero-coupon $100 bond held for one year P i D 95 5.3 92 8.7 100 90 11.1 90 S B 15 25
Supply and Demand Equilibrium: the quantities of bonds supplied and demanded equal • For a zero-coupon $100 bond held for one year P i D 95 5.3 92 8.7 90 11.1 S B 15 25 20
The Fisher Effect Suppose expected inflation rise by 6 percentage-points. D S P i 95 5.3 B 20
The Fisher Effect Suppose expected inflation rise by 6 percentage-points. D S P i 95 5.3 D 92 8.7 B 15 20
The Fisher Effect Suppose expected inflation rise by 6 percentage-points. D S P i 95 5.3 S D 92 8.7 90 11.1 B 15 20 The nominal rate of interest rises by 5.8 pct. pts.
The Fisher Effect Source: Mishkin (1981) “The Real Interest Rate: An Empirical Investigation” Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 15: 151–200. These procedures involve estimating expected inflation as a function of past interest rates, inflation, and time trends.
The Fisher Effect Source: FRED
The Fisher Effect Source: FRED
The Business Cycle and Interest Rates Suppose economic growth is accelerating. D S P i 95 5.3 B 18
The Business Cycle and Interest Rates Suppose economic growth is accelerating. D S P i S 95 5.3 92 8.7 B 18 23
The Business Cycle and Interest Rates Suppose economic growth is accelerating. D D S P i S 95 5.3 93 7.5 92 8.7 B 18 23 23 The quantity and price of bonds both increase
The Business Cycle and Interest Rates Source: Federal Reserve: www.federalreserve.gov/releases/H15/data.htm. The quantity and price of bonds both increase
Keynes’ liquidity preference framework • holding money and buying bonds are the only stores of wealth • the quantity of loanable funds people and firms supply = the value of bonds purchased Total Wealth = Bs + Ms = Bd + Md Bond Market Loanable funds Market Bs–Bd=Ms–Md LD P i BD = 0 if bond market in equilibrium = 0 if loanable funds market in equilibrium = 0 if the market for money is in equilibrium 92 8.7 BS LS L B 15
Keynes’ liquidity preference framework • holding money and buying bonds are the only stores of wealth • the quantity of loanable funds people and firms supply = the value of bonds purchased Loanable funds Market LD LD i i 8.7 8.7 LS LS L L 15 15
Keynes’ liquidity preference framework • holding money and buying bonds are the only stores of wealth • the quantity of loanable funds people and firms supply = the value of bonds purchased • The interest rate in these markets are the same . Loanable funds Market The market for money LD i i MD 8.7 LS L 15 M
The Liquidity Effect • Money supply shifts to the right (increases) if • The Fed injects money into the banking system with OMP • Banking lending increases . Loanable funds Market The market for money LD i i MD 8.7 7.5 LS L 15 M
The Price-level Effect • A one time increase in MS permanently raises the price level by end of year:i = r + p • bond demand falls because the return falls • bond supply rises because the cost of borrowing falls • money demand increases (the supply of loanable funds falls) (demand for loanable funds rises) Bond Market Loanable funds Market The market for money P i i BS BD 8.7 8.7 95 5.3 5.3 92 LD MD LS L B L 15 15 M
The Expected-Inflation Effect • An increase in MS causes inflation expectations to rise, which may diminish over time. • bond demand falls (the supply of loanable funds falls) • bond supply rises (demand for loanable funds rises) • money demand increases Loanable funds Market The market for money i i 8.7 8.7 5.3 5.3 LD MD LS L 15 M
The Income Effect • An increase in MS is an expansionary influence on the economy. • demand for loanable funds rises • money demand increases Loanable funds Market The market for money i i 7.1 7.1 5.3 5.3 LD MD LS L 15 M
Figure 11 Response to an Increase in MS Growth The Total Effect
Figure 11 Response to an Increasein MS Growth The Total Effect
Figure 12 Annual M2 Growth and 3-month T-bill (1950–2011) The Total Effect 4 5 6 2 9 5 a 6 7 7 8 4 3 9 8 1 a 2 3 b 1 b Sources: Federal Reserve: www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h6/hist/h6hist1.txt.