Monetary Policy Normalization: What s New? What s Old? How Does It Matter?

Similar documents
Lessons Learned? Comparing the Federal Reserve s Response to the Crises of and

Monetary Policy Tools in an Environment of Low Interest Rates James Bullard

During the global financial crisis, many central

Economic Outlook. Christopher J. Neely Assistant Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. NLB,LLC The Lodge, Des Peres, MO.

Three Lessons for Monetary Policy from the Panic of 2008

10/30/2018. Chapter 17. The Money Supply Process. Preview. Learning Objectives

Printable Lesson Materials

Chapter 10. Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics. Chapter Preview

Alternatives for Reserve Balances and the Fed s Balance Sheet in the Future. John B. Taylor 1. June 2017

Banking, Liquidity Transformation, and Bank Runs

The Federal Reserve System and Central Banking in the US

Financial Crises and the Great Recession

The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy 1

the Federal Reserve System

9.3 The Federal Reserve System L E A R N I N G O B JE C T I V E S

Implementation and Transmission of Monetary Policy

Alternatives for Reserve Balances and the Fed s Balance Sheet in the Future

International Money and Banking: 8. How Central Banks Set Interest Rates

Chapter 10. The Great Recession: A First Look. (1) Spike in oil prices. (2) Collapse of house prices. (2) Collapse in house prices

Money and Banking. Lecture II: Central Banking and Conventional Monetary Policy Tools. Guoxiong ZHANG, Ph.D. Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Antai

FAQ: Money and Banking

US Federal Reserve: Feels like the first time

Re-Normalize, Don t New-Normalize Monetary Policy. John B. Taylor. Economics Working Paper 14109

Chapter Seventeen. Understand 10/24/2017. The Central Bank Balance Sheet and the Money Supply Process Chapter 17

Things you should know about inflation

The Fed at a Crossroads

The Evolution of the Federal Reserve Swap Lines

Chapter 10: Money and Banking Section 2

Federal Reserve System INFORMAL STRUCTURE

Central banks and the financial system

Chapter 15. Tools of Monetary Policy

Banking on Physics! City College Interdisciplinary Seminar April Joe Pimbley (maxwell-consulting.com)

Global Financial Crisis. Econ 690 Spring 2019

The Yield Curve and Monetary Policy in 2018

4/28/2015 PANICS OF THE PRE-FED ERA

The Rise of Modern Financial Regulation. J. Parman (College of William & Mary) Regulation of Markets, Spring 2013 April 22, / 21

US Federal Reserve: Feels like the first time

the Federal Reserve System

The FRB St Louis New Economic Narrative and Negative Rates

Remarks on Central Banking in Ireland and the U.S.

Chapter 29: The Monetary System Principles of Economics, 8 th Edition N. Gregory Mankiw Page 1

Economic History of the US

Chapter 16: The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy

3. Financial Markets, the Demand for Money and Interest Rates

The First Phase of the U.S. Recovery and Beyond

CHAPTER 31 Money, Banking, and Financial Institutions

DEVELOPMENT OF THE U.S. BANKING SYSTEM

Introduction and Course Overview

An Update on the Tapering Debate

Chapter 10: Money and Banking Section 1

FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, MARKETS, AND MONEY

The FOMC: Ahead on Results, Behind on Rates

Leandro Conte UniSi, Department of Economics and Statistics. Money, Macroeconomic Theory and Historical evidence. SSF_ aa

QE2 in Five Easy Pieces

Discussion of Sargent s Where to draw lines: monetary and fiscal uncertainties

Implementation and Transmission of Monetary Policy

Lecture 13: The Great Depression

Banks can also borrow reserves from the Fed at the (Click to select) at the. References

Understanding the American Federal Reserve

The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations

What Do Central Banks Do? Or Why Is Monetary Policy Implemented by Controlling the Price of Liquidity?

How has money changed over the centuries? What are the functions of money? Where does our money come from?

Copyrighted Material. Introduction

SESSION 5: The Federal Reserve System

Some Considerations for U.S. Monetary Policy Normalization

Overheating Credit Markets

James Bullard. 13 January St. Louis, Missouri

Comments on Monetary Policy at the Effective Lower Bound

Monetary Policy in the 21st Century: Challenges and Prescriptions.

The FED in the Crisis and Beyond: New Policies, Old Principles

The Boundaries of Central Banks

MonetaryTrends. What is the slope of the yield curve telling us?

U.S. Monetary Policy and the Path to Normalization

16-3: Monetary Policy. Notes

10/21/2018. Chapter 16. Learning Objectives. Central Banks. Functions and objectives of central banks. Features of an effective central bank.

Does the Riksbank have to make a profit?

OUTLINE November 1, Review: PPF & AD. How close an output gap? Output Gap & Multiplier 10/31/2017 1:25 PM. Overview of Policy

The Government Deficit and the Financial Crisis

LECTURE 8 Monetary Policy at the Zero Lower Bound: Quantitative Easing. October 10, 2018

BOMA National Advisory Council Meeting Seaport Hotel, Boston MA

Monetary and Fiscal Policy: The Impact on Interest Rates

The Great Recession. ECON 43370: Financial Crises. Eric Sims. Spring University of Notre Dame

Liquidity is Relevant Again

Chapter8 3/5/2018. MONEY, THE PRICE LEVEL, AND INFLATION Part 1. In this chapter: Define money and its functions

The Financial Sector Functions of money Medium of exchange Measure of value Store of value Method of deferred payment

Monetary Policy Frameworks

A wish list for regulatory design

The Fed and The U.S. Economic Outlook

Markets: Fixed Income

PART THREE. Answers to End-of-Chapter Questions and Problems

The Federal Reserve Banking System. K. Maldonado IB Business & Finance John A. Ferguson Senior High School

Today's FOMC statement: how the language changed from prior meeting

Money. Money is anything that serves as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, and a store of value.

Penitence after accusations of error,...

The Monetary System P R I N C I P L E S O F. N. Gregory Mankiw. What Money Is and Why It s Important

The Monetary System CHAPTER. Goals. Outcomes

Monetary Policy and the Expanded Loanable Funds Model

Monetary Policy and Financial Stability

How to Value a Swiftcoin

OCR Economics A-level

Transcription:

Monetary Policy Normalization: What s New? What s Old? How Does It Matter? Cletus Coughlin Senior Vice President and Policy Adviser to the President Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis May 28, 2015 The views expressed here are those of the speakers and do not necessarily represent the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis or of the Federal Reserve System.

U.S. Monetary Policy 2

Policy Rate Has Been Near Zero since December 2008 Link to FRED chart: http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=1bpd 3

The Fed s Balance Sheet Remains Large Link to FRED chart: http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=1bxr 4

U.S. Economy 5

The Labor Market Has Improved Link to FRED chart: http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=1aus 6

Low Inflation: Temporary? Link to FRED chart: http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=1bz7 7

Monetary Policy Normalization: What s New? What s Old? How Does It Matter? Stephen Williamson Vice President and Economist Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis May 28, 2015 The views expressed here are those of the speakers and do not necessarily represent the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis or of the Federal Reserve System.

Tonight s Presentation Early central banking: Bank of England and the early days of the Fed. Before the financial crisis: conventional monetary policy. The financial crisis and unconventional monetary policy. Normalization and the return to conventional monetary policy. 9

King Billy and the Bank of England Bank of England is the first successful central bank founded in 1694, a private financial institution until 1946. Bank of England wasn t started because some economists thought it would be a sound idea. King Billy (King William III) wanted to finance a war. Bank of England wanted to make a profit for its shareholders. 10

Bank of England s Balance Sheet Assets Loans to King Billy Loans to Private Entities Gold Liabilities Notes in Circulation Bank of England was granted a local monopoly on issuing notes, expanded to a monopoly for all of the U.K. in 1844. Bank of England got the monopoly profits from issuing notes; King Billy got a cheap means for financing war. 11

What Are Notes in Circulation? Paper currency issued at the time by banks. Before 1844, Bank of England notes competed with currencies issued by other private banks in the U.K. Notes issued by banks were redeemable in gold. 12

The Bank of England Learned Crisis Management Bank of England Loans Notes Other Banks Gold Gold Public 13

Bank of England Crisis Management South Sea Bubble 1720. Various 18 th and 19 th century financial panics. Walter Bagehot s Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market (1873). Source of modern idea of a central bank as lender of last resort. 14

Bank of England Innovations Central bank as sole issuer of currency national currency that was uniform and safe. Financial crisis intervention: central bank as lender of last resort. Innovations at the time were driven by the desire of the bank to make a profit. But in terms of modern economics, we can understand these innovations as socially beneficial. 15

Founding of the Fed, 1914 Federal Reserve Act of 1913 was based on serious science the work of the National Monetary Commission (after the panic of 1907). Currency (Federal Reserve notes) would be: 1. Uniform 2. Safe 3. Elastic 16

The Fed Was Founded To Get Rid of Pre-Civil War bank notes: issued by statechartered banks. The supply of these notes was not uniform, safe or elastic. National bank notes (1863-1913): safe and uniform, but not elastic. Banking panics: Lack of elasticity helped cause 19 th and early 20 th century banking panics. (Last panic was in 1907.) 17

Discount Window Lending Assets Early Fed Balance Sheet Discount Window Loans to Banks Gold Liabilities Federal Reserve Notes (Currency) Bank Reserves Initial plan for Fed: expand and contract the supply of currency through lending to banks. Idea: smooth interest rates over time and prevent financial panics. 18

The Fed Discovers Open Market Operations 1920s: The Fed discovers that it can move market interest rates by buying and selling Treasury securities. So, the Fed s balance sheet started to look like this: Assets Discount Window Loans Treasury Securities Gold Liabilities Currency Bank Reserves 19

How An Open Market Purchase Works Fed Currency and Reserves Treasuries Financial Markets Assets Discount Window Loans Treasury Securities Gold Liabilities Currency Bank Reserves 20

By the 1930s, the Fed Had Serious Tools Discount window lending to private banks through regional Federal Reserve banks. Open market purchases and sales of Treasury securities by the New York Fed. 21

But Did It Use These Tools during the Great Depression? Not So Much. 22

Fed s Liabilities, 2007-present Reserves Currency 23

Assets on the Fed s Balance Sheet MBS T bonds T bills Repos Loans 24

Fed Funds Rate 25

Why Were There Unusual Interventions after the Great Recession Ended? 26

Another Way To Look at This: 27

Fed s Dual Mandate: Price Stability and Maximum Employment 28

Fed s Dual Mandate: Price Stability and Maximum Employment 29

Why Normalize? U. Rate PCE Inflation PCE Core Inflation Fed Funds Rate February 5.4% 2.6% 2.2% 2.5% 2005 Current 5.4% 0.3% 1.3% 0.13% 30

Do Low Interest Rates Mean High Inflation? 31

Japan s Experience 32

What Does Normalization Entail? Laid out in the FOMC s Policy Normalization Principles and Plans. 1. Get fed funds rate off zero achieve liftoff. 2. End reinvestment. 3. Return the balance sheet to near-zero reserves. Federal Reserve Board economists estimate this process will take seven years once it starts. 33

How Will the Fed s Balance Sheet Shrink? Assets Mortgage Backed Securities Long Maturity Treasuries Liabilities Currency Reserves Reverse Repos As assets mature, reserves fall. Currency increases as demand grows, reducing reserves and reverse repos. 34

Complications Associated with Normalization Reserves now bear interest in theory, this makes interest rate control easy. U.S. financial system a complicated beast so it s not actually so easy. Reverse repo facility intended to help with that. Reverse repos are like reserves, but can be held by financial institutions that can t hold reserves. 35

Fed Funds Rate Is Less than the Interest Rate on Reserves (0.25%) 36

Reverse Repurchase Agreements 37

How Will Normalization Matter for Consumers and Businesses? For financial firms, the differences in how the Fed intervenes in financial markets may make a difference. Higher interest rates will require adjustment, but the process should be gradual, with no big surprises. Normalization not an end in itself primary concern for the Fed is its dual mandate. 38

Conclusions When will liftoff happen? Not a predetermined calendar date depends on future data and the views of FOMC participants. Large Fed balance sheet not a threat to price stability. Fed s actions determined by what the FOMC thinks is best, given the Fed s dual mandate. 39