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Financial Markets What determines interest rates How the Federal Reserve System (Fed) influences interest rates Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #1 Financial Markets Some Assumptions One bond market One interest rate Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #2 The Demand for Money A Scenario… Two financial assets to choose from Money: Used for transactions (currency and checkable deposits) Bonds: Cannot be used for transactions and pays a positive interest rate (i) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #3 The Demand for Money A Scenario… Your financial wealth = $12,000 Choice: How to allocate the $12,000 between money and bond Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #4 The Demand for Money A Scenario… The proportion of money and bonds depend on: Your level of transactions The interest rate on bond Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #5 The Demand for Money A Scenario… The proportion of money and bonds depend on the interest rate on bonds: The interest rate on bonds: •When the interest rate (i) increases the incentive to hold bonds increases •At high i, you may choose to reduce your money holdings to two weeks or $500 (spending = $1000/month) and increase bond holdings to $11,500 Question: If i=0, how much would you hold in bonds? Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #6 The Demand for Money A Summary: The demand for money (Md) depends on: •The level of transactions which are proportional to nominal income ($Y) •The interest rate on bonds Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #7 The Demand for Money Md = $YL(i) (-) M Demand for money $Y Nominal income L (i ) The liquidity demand for Money is a function of i Md is inversely related to i (-) Econ 302 d Financial Markets Slide #8 The Demand for Money Interest Rate, i Graphically Md = $YL (i) i Md Md (for $Y´ > $Y) (for nominal Income $Y) M´ M Money, M Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #9 Interest Rate, i The Demand for Money i2 • Md and i are inversely related • Given $Y at i, M = M i2, M = M2 i1, M = M1 b a i c i1 Md ($Y) M2 M M1 Money, M Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #10 The Demand for Money Graphically Md = $YL (i) • Increase $Y to $Y´; Md shifts to Md´ Interest Rate, i • M increases from M to M´ (a to b) a i b Md ($Y) Md´ ($Y´ > $Y) M´ M Money, M Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #11 The Demand for Money Money Demand and the Interest Rate: The Evidence M $YL(i) d d Divide both sides by $Y M L(i ) $Y d M $Y Econ 302 = ratio of money to nominal income Financial Markets Slide #12 The Demand for Money Money Demand and the Interest Rate: The Evidence d M & i should be inversely $Y related Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #13 The Demand for Money Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #14 The Demand for Money Money Demand and the Interest Rate: The Evidence Observations M $Y $Y M Econ 302 1960 = 27% 1998 = 13% @ Approximately the same i = Velocity of Money 1 1960 : 3. 7 .27 Financial Markets 1 1998 : 7.6 .13 Slide #15 The Demand for Money Money Demand and the Interest Rate: The Evidence What do you think? What caused the velocity to double between 1960 and 1998? Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #16 The Demand for Money Money Demand and the Interest Rate: The Evidence Observations Negative relation between Econ 302 Financial Markets M &i $Y Slide #17 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I Money Demand, Money Supply & the Equilibrium Interest Rate Assume: • All money (M) is currency, supplied by the central bank • Financial Market Equilibrium Occurs when: Money Supply = Money Demand M = $YL(i) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #18 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I Money Demand, Money Supply & the Equilibrium Interest Rate •The LM relation: M = $YL(i) •The demand for Liquidity (L) = Supply of Money Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #19 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I The Equilibrium Graphically Interest Rate, i Ms A i1 Equilibrium interest, I, Md = MS Md ($Y) M Money, M Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #20 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I The effects of an increase in National Income on i Interest Rate, i Ms A´ i2 • Increase $Y to $Y´ • Md increases to Md´ • Equilibrium moves from A to A´ • i increases from i1 to i2 A i1 Md´ ($Y´ > $Y) Md ($Y) M Money, M Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #21 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I The effects of an increase in the Money Supply on i Interest Rate, i Ms Ms´ • Increase Ms to Ms´ • Equilibrium moves from A to A´ • Interest rate falls from i1 to i2 A i1 A´ i2 Md ($Y) M M´ Money, M Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #22 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I Open Market Operations: •Buying and selling government bonds by the central bank •Buy bonds to increase the money supply (and lower the interest rate) •Sell bonds to decrease the money supply (and raise the interest rate) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #23 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I Balance Sheet Banks Assets Bonds Econ 302 Central Bank Liabilities Money (Currency) Buy $1 million in bonds: • Bonds increase • Currency decreases at the Central Bank and increases in the economy Financial Markets Slide #24 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I Monetary Policy and Open Market Operations The Price of Bonds and the Interest Rate Assume: •The bonds pay $100 in one year •$PB = Price of the bonds (B) today Therefore: •The return on the bond (i) is: $100 $ PB i $ PB Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #25 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I Monetary Policy and Open Market Operations The Price of Bonds and the Interest Rate For Example, Assume: $PB = $95 $PB = $90 $100 $95 $5 i 0.053 5.3% $95 95 Econ 302 i Financial Markets $100 $90 $10 0.111 11.1% $90 90 Slide #26 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I Monetary Policy and Open Market Operations Observation! The price of a bond and the interest rate are inversely related. Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #27 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I Monetary Policy and Open Market Operations The Price of Bonds and the Interest Rate Calculating the price of a bond-Assume a bond with a $100 value in one year 100 $ PB 1 i Econ 302 100 i 5.3 $ PB 95 1 .053 100 i 11.1 $ PB 90 1 .111 Financial Markets Slide #28 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I Monetary Policy and Open Market Operations Expansionary Open Market Operation: Increase the Money Supply and Lower the interest rate Step 1: Central bank buys bonds. Step 2: The central bank injects money (currency) into the economy to pay for the bonds. Step 3: The demand for bonds increases, causing the price of bonds to rise. Step 4: When the price of bonds increases, the interest rate falls. Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #29 The Determination of the Interest Rates: I A Summary: • i is determined by MD & MS • Central bank changes i by changing MS • Central bank changes MS with open market operations • Buying bonds increases the MS and reduces i • Selling bonds decreases the MS and increases i Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #30 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II Interest rates in an economy with currency and checkable deposits What banks do: Banks are financial intermediaries-• They receive funds (deposits) which are liabilities • They make loans and buy bonds which are assets Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #31 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II Interest rates in an economy with currency and checkable deposits What banks do: Banks Assets Liabilities Reserves Loans Bonds Assets Checkable deposits Central Banks Central Bank Money =Reserves +Currency Bonds Econ 302 Liabilities Financial Markets Slide #32 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II Why do banks hold reserves? 1. To cover the cash withdrawls by depositors. 2. To cover the payment of checks which are deposited in other banks. 3. To maintain the legal reserve requirement (10%) set by the Fed (Reserve ratio = Reserves checkable deposits). Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #33 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The supply and demand for central bank money Demand for money Demand for checkable deposits Demand for reserves (by banks) Demand for currency Econ 302 Financial Markets Demand for Central Bank Money = Supply of Central Bank Money Slide #34 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The demand for money • The overall demand for money Md is unchanged with checkable deposits: Md $YL (i ) ( ) However, people must choose between currency and checkable deposits. Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #35 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The demand for money Assume: •C represents the fixed proportion of money people hold as currency (US: C=.4) •1-C is the proportion of money held as checkable deposits. Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #36 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The demand for money Assume: The demand for currency is: CUd The demand for checkable deposits is: Dd CUd = cMd: Demand for currency (Central Bank Money) Dd = (1-c)Md: Demand for Reserves (Central Bank Money) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #37 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The demand for reserves Assume: : Represents the reserve ratio (reserves to checkable deposits) R: Represents the dollar amount of reserves D: Represents the dollar amount of checkable deposits Therefore: R D (US : 10% or 0.1) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #38 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The demand for reserves If people hold deposits of Dd, then banks must hold reserves (R) of Dd. R D d D (1 c) M d d R (1 c) M d Econ 302 Financial Markets d Slide #39 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The demand for reserves The Equilibrium H : Supply of Central Bank Money CU d R D : Demand for money H CU R : Equilibrium (Supply of Money d d = Demand for Money) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #40 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II Equilibrium: H CU d R d CU d (1 c) M d H cM d (1 c)M d c (1 c)M d d M $YL(i) H c (1 c)$LY (i) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #41 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II Supply of Central Bank Money = Demand for Central Bank Money H c (1 c)$LY (i) Special Case: Assume, people only hold currency: C=1 H 1 (1 1)$LY (i) $LY (i) Then banks do not impact the money supply. Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #42 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II Assume: People hold only checkable deposits: C=O H O (1 0)$LY (i) $LY (i) Assume: .10 &.10$LY (i) = Central Bank Money Demand The demand for central bank money = or 1/10Md If C<1, demand for central bank money <Md, Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #43 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The Equilibrium Graphically Interest Rate, i Supply Equilibrium A i1 Demand Cud + Rd ($Y) H Central Bank Money, H Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #44 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The supply and demand for reserves Recall: Supply of Central Bank Money = Demand for Central Bank Money c (1 c)$LY (i) Therefore: H H CU d And: H CU R d =Supply of Reserves d Supply of Reserves = Demand for Reserves Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #45 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The supply and demand for reserves The Federal Funds Market: The market for bank reserves The Federal Funds Rate: The interest rate that equates the supply of Reserves (H-Cud) with demand for reserves (Rd) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #46 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The supply and demand for money Recall: Therefore: H c (1 c)$LY (i) Supply of Money = Demand for Money 1 H $YL (i) c (1 c) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #47 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The supply and demand for money c (1 c) 1 Therefore: 1 1 c (1 c) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #48 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II The supply and demand for money Observations: 1 Money Multiplier c (1 c) •The supply of money is a multiple of the Central Bank money. •Central Bank money (monetary base) is High-powered money (H) Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #49 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II Open market operations revisited If: C=O (People hold only checkable deposits) , The Multiplier = 1 1 c (1 c) If: = .10, The Multiplier = Econ 302 Financial Markets 1 10 .10 Slide #50 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II Open market operations revisited An example of the multiplier Assume: = .10 & the Fed buys $100 worth of bonds • Seller1 deposits $100 in bank A and Central Bank money increases • Bank A puts $10 (.10x100) in reserve and buys $90 in bonds • Seller2 deposits $90 (.10x90) in Bank B and checkable deposits increase $90 • Bank B puts $9(.10x90) in reserve and buys $81 in bonds • Seller3 deposits $81 in bank C and checkable deposit increases $81 Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #51 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II Open market operations revisited An Example Questions: • How much money has been created after seller 3 deposits the $81? • How much money could be created from the Fed’s original $100 purchase? Hint: The Multiplier = Econ 302 Financial Markets 1 & .10 Slide #52 The Determination of the Interest Rates: II A Summary: Increases in Central Bank money (Fed buys bonds) decrease the interest rate Decreases in Central Bank money (Fed sells bond) increase the interest rate Cashless economy? What is the role of the Central Bank? Econ 302 Financial Markets Slide #53