FRIC/Finance Seminar with David Skeie, Mays Texas A&M University

Upcoming FRIC/Finance Seminar with David Skeie, Mays Business School, Texas A&M University

Friday, May 22, 2015 - 11:00 to 12:15

FRIC Center for Financial Frictions and the Department of Finance are proud to announce the upcoming seminar with David Skeie, Mays Business School, Texas A&M University

David Skeie will present

PDF icon Federal Reserve Tools for Managing Rates and Reserves

Joint with Antoine Martin, James McAndrews, and Ali Palida (Federal Reserve Bank of New York).   

 

Abstract:

Monetary policy measures taken by the Federal Reserve as a response to the 2007-09 financial crisis and subsequent economic downturn led to a large increase in the level of outstanding reserves. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has a range of tools to control short-term market interest rates in this situation. We study several of these tools, namely interest on excess reserves (IOER), reverse repurchase agreements (RRPs), and the term deposit facility (TDF). We find that overnight RRPs (ON RRPs) provide a better floor on rates than term RRPs because they are available to absorb daily liquidity shocks. Whether the TDF or RRPs best support equilibrium rates depends on the relative intensity of the frictions that banks face, which are bank balance sheet costs and interbank monitoring costs in our model. We show that when both costs are large, using the RRP and TDF concurrently most effectively raises short-term rates. While public money supplied by the Federal Reserve in the form of reserves can alleviate bank liquidity shocks by reducing interbank lending costs, large levels of reserve increase banks' balance sheet size and can induce greater bank moral hazard. RRPs can reduce levels of costly bank equity that banks are endogenously required to hold as a commitment device against risk-shifting returns on assets.

The page was last edited by: Department of Finance // 12/17/2017