The Eurosystem s asset purchase programme

Similar documents
Recent developments in the euro money market. Money Market Contact Group Frankfurt, 18 September 2012

The ECB s Expanded Asset Purchase Programme

Forecasting liquidity and conducting credit operations

The ECB s perspective on covered bonds

Monetary policy of the ECB, its concepts and tools

Review of the latest money market developments since the last MMCG meeting

14:45 16:00 - STREAM 1- Marly. Are Euro Debt Capital Markets a Sustainable Option to Fulfill Funding Requirements in the Current Financial Crisis?

General debt-related data. page 3

2 The ECB s corporate sector purchase programme: its implementation and impact

European Securitisation Data Reports

Capital Market Press Conference 2013 / Frankfurt, 5 December 2013

Impact of Reductions in Reserves in the euro area

2 The impact of the corporate sector purchase programme on corporate bond markets and the financing of euro area non-financial corporations

Strategic Stimulus: Analysis of Eurosystem Monetary Operations

ABI MONTHLY REPORT 1 March 2018 (Main evidence)

The ECB s Strategy in Good and Bad Times Massimo Rostagno European Central Bank

The Greek. Hans-Werner Sinn

ABI MONTHLY REPORT 1 January 2017 (Main evidence)

1.1. Low yield environment

Non-standard monetary policy in the euro area Economics Roundtable discussion (8 September 2017)

ECB Preview. Ready to scale back QE. 18 October 2017

ABI MONTHLY REPORT 1 July 2018 (Main evidence)

05 April Government bond yields, curve slopes and spreads Swaps and Forwards Credit & money market spreads... 4

TLAC & MREL. Antonio Ordás - Head of Global Markets. October 2015

Challenges to the single monetary policy and the ECB s response. Benoît Cœuré Member of the Executive Board European Central Bank

ECB QE: Buxl/Bund tapering and step up in Ita/Fra/Spa

Economic situation and outlook

Auction of DGB Opening auction of new 10Y DGB on Wednesday 25 January. Frederik Nordsborg. Maria Holm Rasmussen 20 January 2017

Euro Rates Update. 26 January % 0.9% 0.8% 2.4% 0.7% 0.6% 2.2% 0.5% 0.4% 2.0% 0.3% 0.2% 1.8% 0.1% 0.0% 1.6% Jan-15 May-15 Aug-15 Nov-15 Feb-16

ABGSC Swedish Banks Treasury lunches

ECB monetary policy since June 2014

Euro Rates Update. 26 February % 0.9% 0.8% 2.4% 0.7% 0.6% 2.2% 0.5% 0.4% 2.0% 0.3% 0.2% 1.8% 0.1% 0.0%

Economic outlook and issuers' perspectives on the covered bonds market. Michael Schulz Head of Fixed Income Research

High yield and emerging market bonds continue rally

Economic and Monetary Policy Perspectives for Europe and the Euro Area

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT. Annex to the. Report from the Commission

Vítor Constâncio ECB Vice-President. Fragmentation and Rebalancing in the euro area

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 2 nd quarter 2018

Domestic Debt Market Development in Poland Marek Szczerbak Republic of Poland Ministry of Finance Public Debt Department

Investment Research General Market Conditions 3 December Dec HICP (flash est. 0.1%) LTRO1 matures

Negative interest rates: Lessons from the euro area

Second JCER-OMFIF seminar

1Q14 Results Analyst s Appendix. Madrid, April 30 th 2014

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 2 nd quarter 2017

Annual Accounts of the ECB

New developments in collateral and liquidity management in Europe: Quantitative Easing and monetary policy considerations

Bulgarian Banking Association

Belgian Financial Forum

IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS. Requested by the ECON committee. constraints. Monetary Dialogue July 2018

Independent Central Banking in times of crisis

Determinants of intra-euro area government bond spreads during the financial crisis

1.1. Low yield environment

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 1 st quarter 2018

The crisis response in the euro area. Peter Praet Pioneer Investment s Colloquia Series Beijing, 17 April 2013

Monitor Euro area credit monitor

Euro-QE at the end of the road for now

Transparency in the U.S. Repo Market

The ECB's drive to build purchased assets

The ECB's drive to build purchased assets

Lezione tenuta dal Dott. Fabrizio Tesseri (Dirigente Uffici II e VI, Direzione II Debito Pubblico, Ministero dell Economia e delle Finanze)

PRESS RELEASE NOVEMBER 2009

COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES COMMISSION STAFF WORKING PAPER. Annex to the REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION

Wider ECB collateral & LTROs

Euro GC Pooling. Continues Dynamic Growth. Frankfurt, February 29, 2008

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 4 th quarter 2017

Spanish public debt. Spanish Public Debt Fixed Income. We expect the long end of the curve to flatten further. Investment case. analisis.lacaixa.

Risk-Free Rates of Return

ESF Securitisation. Data Report

Asset Liability Management Report 4 Q 2018

Euro Area Securities Issues Statistics: February 2017


PRESS RELEASE. Securities issued by Hungarian residents and breakdown by holding sectors. January 2019

ECB Research Draghi reveals favourable TLTRO details

LEGAL BASIS OBJECTIVES ACHIEVEMENTS

Limits to Arbitrage: Empirical Evidence from Euro Area Sovereign Bond Markets

Executive Board meeting. 14 December 2011

EUROZONE BANKS AND CAPITAL FLOW REVERSAL

1 The provision of financial services

LOAN MARKET DATA AND ANALYTICS BY THOMSON REUTERS LPC

Euro-QE at the end of the road for now

Theviewsexpresedinthesepapersandpresentationsarethoseoftheauthor(s)only,and

ROMANIA March Gemloc Conference

CDO Market Overview & Outlook. CDOs in the Heartland. Lang Gibson Director of Structured Credit Research March 25, 2004

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 1 st quarter 2017

ECB policy: how to taper without causing a tantrum?

ECB Money Market Workshop Discussion Strains on money market makers and money market tensions by Fecht, Reitz and Weber

Recent developments in Money Markets Johan Evenepoel

1. THE ECONOMY AND FINANCIAL MARKETS

For professional advisers only. Schroders. for Bonds. Strength. in bonds. Best Large Fixed-Interest House

Assessing Capital Markets Union


Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 3 rd quarter 2017

Invesco Perpetual Fixed Interest

MAKING ROOM FOR THE NEEDY: THE CREDIT-REALLOCATION EFFECTS OF THE ECB S CORPORATE QE

XML Publisher Balance Sheet Vision Operations (USA) Feb-02

Investment Opportunities in Global Fixed Income Markets

The collateral scarcity premia in EU repo markets

Market Operations in Fiscal 2016

Recent developments in eligible and used collateral

Corporate bonds resurgent in March

Transcription:

Katja Hettler Lia Cruz Monika Znidar Euro Area Bond Markets Section DG-Market Operations The Eurosystem s asset purchase programme ECB Central Banking Seminar Frankfurt, 13 July 2018

Rubric The Eurosystem s asset purchase programme Overview 1 2 3 4 Introduction Public sector purchase programme (PSPP) Private sector purchase programmes (CBPP3, CSPP, ABSPP) Securities lending 5 Conclusion and next steps 2

Rubric The Eurosystem s asset purchase programmes Overview 1 2 3 4 Introduction Public sector purchase programme (PSPP) Private sector purchase programmes (CBPP3, CSPP, ABSPP) Securities lending 5 Conclusion and next steps 3

Rubric The APP a bird s eye view The expanded asset purchase programme (APP): 4 programmes introduced in 2014-2016 Timeline of non-standard measures Source: ECB. 4

Rubric The different components of the APP PSPP represents more than 80% of total APP holdings At amortized costs, in euro billion (31 May 2018) PSPP 1,992.9 CBPP3 254.3 CSPP 156.8 ABSPP 27.4 Total APP 2,431.4 Source: ECB. Last observation: 31 May 2018 5

The Rubric different components of the APP Net APP purchases have been calibrated over time Monthly change in holdings (at amortised cost) Source: ECB. Latest observation: 31 May 2018 6

Rubric The different components of the APP and the reinvestments of redemptions also play a relevant role Realised and expected APP redemptions (rolling 12 month period) Source: ECB. Latest observation: 31 May 2018. 7

Rubric The Eurosystem s asset purchase programme Overview 1 2 3 4 Introduction Public sector purchase programme (PSPP) Private sector purchase programmes (CBPP3, CSPP, ABSPP) Securities lending 5 Conclusion and next steps 8

Rubric PSPP design and modalities (I) PSPP covers a broad range of government linked entities PSPP 90% 10% Euro-area sovereign / Agencies EU institutions (supranational & institutional) 10% 80% ECB NCB NCB Loss-sharing Non loss-sharing % Proportion of purchases

Rubric PSPP design and modalities (II) NCB purchases are determined by the ECB capital key, with some flexibility Substitute purchases for NCBs are possible to reach capital key Purchases also at negative yields, below the deposit facility rate only to the extent necessary The implementation of the PSPP aims ex ante at market neutrality in the sense of avoiding dislocations in euro area government bond curves within the minimum maturity of 1 year and a maximum maturity of less than 31 years. Blackout period to avoid direct influence on primary market price formation and also important with respect to monetary financing prohibition Issue/issuer limits to avoid blocking minority for CACs and to avoid becoming overly dominant player in sovereign bond market 10

Rubric PSPP - implementation Insights into the implementation Purchases are coordinated within the Eurosystem on a daily basis via chat and teleconference at Portfolio Manager level Selection of bonds is based on Pricing / spread analysis Limit restrictions Feasibility considerations Scarcity in the market Counterparties inventories and positions Trades are conducted with a wide set of counterparties Purchases are done bilaterally or via reverse auctions Most purchases in government bonds are done electronically 11

Rubric Euro area bond market developments (I) 10-year euro area government bond yields at record low levels VLTRO announcement Draghi s London Speech ABSPP & CBPP3 announcement PSPP announcement Source: Bloomberg, ECB Staff calculations. Last observation: 31 May 2018. 12

Rubric Euro area bond market developments (II) Political risks in Europe with (temporary) market impact 2-year French-German sovereign yield spreads increased around French presidential elections in Apr-May 2017, but stabilised and returned quickly to previous levels 2-year Spanish-German sovereign yield spread broadly stable, despite political developments in Catalonia in Oct 2017 Source: Bloomberg, ECB Staff calculations. Last observation: 31 May 2018. 13

Rubric Euro area bond market developments (III) Italian political developments with significant impact on Italian sovereign debt market % 8.0 7.0 6.0 5.0 Bond yields 10-year IT 10-year DE 3.5 3.0 2.5 4.0 2.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 1.5 1.0 0.5-1.0 0.0 bps 600 500 400 300 200 100 IT-DE yield spread 0 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 Jan-18 Feb-18 Mar-18 Apr-18 May-18 Jun-18. Source: Bloomberg. Last observation: 04 June 2018. 14

Rubric The Eurosystem s asset purchase programme Overview 1 2 3 4 Introduction Public sector purchase programme (PSPP) Private sector purchase programmes (CBPP3, CSPP, ABSPP) Securities lending 5 Conclusion and next steps 15

Private Rubricsector parts of the APP: objectives & transparency ABSPP CBPP3 CSPP Objectives / motivation provide credit to the real economy; help lenders diversify funding sources Contribute to the revitalisation of a more sustainable securitisation in the euro area facilitate credit provision by banks to the real economy support financing conditions in the euro area strengthen the pass-through of the Eurosystem s APP to financing conditions of the real economy; provide further monetary policy accommodation Eligible Universe Mon. pol. eligible ABS (subject to Due Diligence assessment) Mon. pol. eligible CBs for own use & multi-cédulas Non-financial and financial corporate securities (excluding unsecured bank bonds) Minimum rating CQS3 CQS3 CQS3 Maturity All All 6 months 30 years Issue Limit 70%* 70%* / ** 33%/70%* / ** Issuer limit No Yes** Yes* Purchases 1 ary & 2 ary market 1 ary & 2 ary market 1 ary & 2 ary market (no 1 ary for public sector) Implementation 6 NCBs NCBs and ECB 6 NCBs Income/Loss Sharing Yes Yes Yes 16 * Specific conditions for programme countries apply ** Combined Eurosystem holdings from monetary policy and investment portfolios

Rubric Private sector parts of the APP: Review Since the start of the programmes, several positive developments are to highlight: 1. Broad based spread tightening. Covered bond asset swap spreads, per selected jurisdiction bps 160 CBPP3 Announceme nt CBPP3 Start DE ES IT FR Spreads of AAA-rated* floating rate RMBS with 5-7 years maturity (bps) bps ABSPP 300 announcement ABSPP start IT NL ES-ECB elig. PT-ECB elig. ES IE IT-ECB elig. 110 200 60 100 10-40 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Jan-15 Apr-15 Jul-15 Oct-15 Jan-16 Apr-16 Jul-16 Oct-16 Jan-17 Apr-17 Jul-17 Oct-17 Jan-18 Apr-18 Sources and notes: iboxx indices. Last observation: 31 May 2018. 17 0 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Jan-15 Apr-15 Jul-15 Oct-15 Jan-16 Apr-16 Jul-16 Oct-16 Jan-17 Apr-17 Jul-17 Oct-17 Jan-18 Apr-18 Source: J.P. Morgan. Notes: (*) rating at issuance. Most spreads are over 3- month Euribor. Last observation 31 May 2018.

Rubric Private sector parts of the APP: Review with positive spill overs to non-eligible fixed income securities Corporate bond spreads in EUR denominated investment grade vs high yield sector Sources and notes: ICE BAML EUR corporate bond index, ECB calculations. Last observation: 31 May 2018. 18

Rubric Private sector parts of the APP: Review 2. Issuance remained healthy or even picked up Covered bond issuance volumes Asset-backed securities issuance volumes EUR bn AT, BE, DE, FI, FR, NL ES, IE, IT, PT 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 (YTD) Source: Dealogic, ECB calculations. EUR-denominated benchmark size primary market issuances. Last observation: 31 May 2018. 19 Source: JP Morgan and ECB calculation. Last observation: 31 May 2018.

Rubric Private sector parts of the APP: Review however it is not yet evident that new or infrequent issuers have become more active Corporate bond issuance volumes Bond issuance by infrequent euro area nonfinancial corporate bond issuers EUR bn 250 EUR bn 40 200 150 CSPP started in Jun 2016 35 30 25 CSPP started in Jun 2016 20 100 15 50 10 5 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 (YTD) 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 (YTD) Source: Dealogic, ECB calculations. EUR-denominated benchmark size primary market issuances. Last observation: 31 May 2018. 20 Sources: Dealogic, ECB calculations. EUR-denominated primary market issuances. Issuer is considered infrequent if they have no issuance over the previous 5 years. Last observation: 31 May 2018.

Rubric Experience of the private sector parts of the APP: e.g. of the CSPP CSPP at work: Eurosystem has bought >1,000 bonds, from all sectors and a variety of countries Split per country, sector and rating is generally in line with market capitalisation Sources: ECB, Bloomberg. Note: CSPP holdings as of end of Q1 2018. CSPP holdings with a remaining maturity below 6 months are excluded. The numbers may not sum to 100% due to rounding. The eligible CSPP bond universe contains all bonds that are currently eligible for the CSPP. ECB coordinates purchases, executed by 6 NCBs, specialists in their jurisdictions To guarantee smooth implementation, there is continuous communication on market conditions, participation in primary market and of secondary market purchases

Rubric Experience of the private sector parts of the APP: e.g. of the CSPP calibration considers market functioning and liquidity impact to ensure market neutrality (1) CSPP purchases vary month by month, including split between primary and secondary markets (2) CSPP holds more of recently issued bonds (holdings per year of issuance) EUR bn Primary market purchases Secondary market purchases 10 35% CSPP-eligible bond universe CSPP holdings 9 8 30% 7 25% 6 5 20% 4 15% 3 2 10% 1 5% 0 Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May 2016 2017 2018 0% <2010 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Source: ECB. Last observation: 31 May 2018. 22 Source: ECB, Bloomberg. Distribution based on nominal amounts. Last observation 31 May 2018.

Rubric Experience of the private sector parts of the APP: e.g. of the CSPP flexibility is the key (3) Evolution of the average CSPP trade size suggests that liquidity conditions have remained adequate Index 140 average trade size (4) Contribution of private sector programmes overtime illustrates flexibility in implementation EURbn 90 Total APP % of private sector purchases (rhs) 45% 130 80 40% 120 70 35% 110 60 30% 100 50 40 25% 20% 90 30 15% 80 20 10% 70 10 5% 60 0 0% Jun-16 Sep-16 Dec-16 Mar-17 Jun-17 Sep-17 Dec-17 Mar-18 Mar-15 Jun-15 Sep-15 Dec-15 Mar-16 Jun-16 Sep-16 Dec-16 Mar-17 Jun-17 Sep-17 Dec-17 Mar-18 Source: ECB. Note: Index: June 2016 = 100. Last observation: 31 May 2018. Source: ECB. Last observation: 31 May 2018. 23

Rubric The Eurosystem s asset purchase programme Overview 1 2 3 4 Introduction Public sector purchase programme (PSPP) Private sector purchase programmes (CBPP3, CSPP, ABSPP) Securities lending 5 Conclusion and next steps 24

Rubric APP securities lending Flexible set-up of the Eurosystem facilities Aim: To support bond and repo market liquidity without unduly curtailing normal repo market activity Common principles and pricing rules Decentralised implementation Balance between harmonisation and adjustments to local markets Primarily targeting market makers Strategic and fails lending facilities Monitoring the markets and the usage of facilities To ensure the ongoing effectiveness Changes in parameters introduced when deemed appropriate 25

Rubric APP securities lending Parameters of the ECB securities lending have been adjusted over the years Date Decision / Event Description Apr 2016 Nov 2016 Dec 2016 Dec 2016 May 2017 Mar 2018 Significant amendments of parameters More flexibility in timelines for borrowing Introduction of PSPP SL versus cash Pricing of lending versus security collateral Introduction of term repo up to 2 weeks and change in cut-off time Increase in cash collateral limit Move to open repo More favourable pricing schedule and lower fails fee Settlement possible at T, T+1 and T+2 (used to be only T+1) 7 Eurosystem members (including the ECB) started accepting cash collateral (currently 9), overall limit of EUR 50bn Minimum spread lowered from 30 bps to 10 bps In addition to open repo, borrowing on term repo basis introduced (up to 2 weeks) and longer cutoff time for returning bonds Limit on cash collateral received versus PSPP securities lending up from EUR 50 bn to EUR 75 bn. Note: The marked changes were applied to the entire Eurosystem. 26

Rubric APP securities lending Eurosystem PSPP on-loan balance rather stable this year, lending vs cash declining recently Average balances over the month in euro billion Source: ECB. Latest observation: 31 May 2018. Note: Includes average on-loan balance of SMP holdings. 27

Rubric APP securities lending Secured market functioning has improved recently Repo rates in selected jurisdictions % Italy Germany France Spain 0-1 -2-3 -4-5 -6 Apr-15 Jul-15 Oct-15 Jan-16 Apr-16 Jul-16 Oct-16 Jan-17 Apr-17 Jul-17 Oct-17 Jan-18 Apr-18 Source: BrokerTec. Latest observation: 31 May 2018. 28

Rubric The Eurosystem s asset purchase programme Overview 1 2 3 4 Introduction Public sector purchase programme (PSPP) Private sector purchase programmes (CBPP3, CSPP, ABSPP) Securities lending 5 Conclusion and next steps 29

Rubric Conclusions and next steps The APP, alongside other measures, has been instrumental in providing an adequate degree of monetary policy accommodation; The operational set up of the several components of the APP is sufficiently flexible to allow for market neutrality; More responsive APP securities lending has led to increased lending volumes, coinciding with diminishing repo-market tensions; Monthly pace of the net asset purchases is now 30 billion per month, and it is anticipated that, subject to incoming data confirming the Governing Council s medium-term inflation outlook, it will be reduced from October to December 2018 to 15 billion; Positive net purchases will then end but reinvestments of principal payments will continue for an extended period of time and in any case for as long as necessary to maintain favourable liquidity conditions and an ample degree of monetary accommodation. 30