Financial Markets: ECON 2123: Macroeconomics
Financial Markets: ECON 2123: Macroeconomics
Financial Markets: ECON 2123: Macroeconomics
Fei DING
The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
FINANCIAL MARKETS
PREVIOUSLY …
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Understand sources and determinants of demand from decomposition of GDP.
Define and derive the short run equilibrium output using two approaches.
Describe effects of fiscal policy on equilibrium output, and its limitations.
2
Ch4: Financial Markets
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Explain factors that determine the demand for money and write down the
money demand function.
Define and derive equilibrium interest rate in the financial markets.
Describe roles of banks and understand how the supply and demand of money
change with and without the presence of banks.
3
FEDERAL RESERVE CUTS RATES BY
HALF PERCENTAGE POINT TO
COMBAT VIRUS FEAR
CENTRAL BANK LOWERS FEDERAL-FUNDS
RATE RANGE TO 1% TO 1.25% IN ITS
FIRST BETWEEN-MEETING MOVE SINCE
THE FINANCIAL CRISIS
4
QUANTITATIVE EASING (QE)
QE1, QE2, and QE3
The expression "QE2" became a "ubiquitous nickname" in 2010, usually used to
refer to a second round of quantitative easing by central banks in the United
States. Retrospectively, the round of quantitative easing preceding QE2 may be
called "QE1". Similarly, "QE3" refers to the third round of quantitative easing
following QE2.
QE3 was announced on September 13, 2012. In an 11-to-1 vote, the Federal
Reserve decided to launch a new $40 billion a month, open-ended, bond
purchasing program; to continue until at least mid-2015. According to
NASDAQ.com, this is effectively a stimulus program which allows the Federal
Reserve to print $40 billion dollars a month for an unlimited amount of
time. Ratings firm Egan-Jones said it believes the Fed’s decision “will hurt the
U.S. economy and, by extension, credit quality.” As a result the firm once again
slashed the U.S. bond rating bringing it down to AA-. Federal Reserve chairman
Ben Bernanke acknowledged concerns about inflation.
5
THINGS TO THINK ABOUT…
What’s the relation between interest rate and overall
condition of the economy?
6
FINANCIAL MARKETS OVERVIEW
7
~Zero interests
MONEY Easy transactions
A type of wealth
Self-sufficiency
Without Money
Barter economy
8
MONEY VS. OTHER FINANCIAL ASSETS
9
MONEY – THE MOST LIQUID OF ALL
11
THE DEMAND FOR MONEY
M d $Y L(i)
Increases proportionally with nominal income ($Y) – captures
transaction purpose of money (and taken as given for now)
Suppose real income is unchanged but prices double leading to a
doubling of nominal income. We need to hold twice as much cash to
buy the same consumption baskets.
Hyperinflation – super high inflation under which people must carry lots
of money, but real income is unchanged.
13
14
THE DEMAND FOR MONEY – GRAPH
M d $YL(i )
( )
Figure 4 - 1
The Demand for Money
15
MONEY MARKET EQUILIBRIUM
Figure 4 - 2
The Determination of
the Interest Rate
The interest rate must be
such that the supply of
M $Y L(i)
money (which is
independent of the interest
rate) is equal to the
demand for money (which
does depend on the
interest rate).
18
MONEY MARKET EQUILIBRIUM
Figure 4 - 3
The Effects of an Increase
in Nominal Income on the M $Y L(i)
Interest Rate
An increase in nominal income
leads to an increase in the
interest rate.
$Y ↑ → transaction ↑ → Md ↑
(at any i) → money demand
curve shifts to the right.
19
HOW DOES MARKET BALANCE ITSELF?
Hold money vs. hold bond
Our usual way of thinking
$1 $1, interest on money is 0.
$1 $(1+i), interest on bond is i.
The way that works in reality
Money: $100 gets you $100 in the future.
Bond: $p gets you $100 in the future.
What’s the relation between p and i?
20
BOND PRICE AND YIELD
21
HOW DOES MARKET BALANCE ITSELF?
At the current interest rate, suppose the supply
of money is less than the demand for money.
Given this information, we know that:
1) the price of bonds will tend to increase.
23
MONEY MARKET EQUILIBRIUM
Figure 4 - 4 Ms'
The Effects of an Increase
in the Money Supply on the
Interest Rate M $Y L(i)
An increase in the
supply of money leads
to a decrease in the
interest rate.
24
MONETARY POLICY
Suppose nominal
income increases and
that the central bank
wants to keep the
interest rate unchanged.
What monetary policy
should it use?
25
OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS
Figure 4 - 5
The Balance Sheet of the
Central Bank and the
Effects of an Expansionary
Open Market Operation
Open market operations
lead to equal changes in
assets and liabilities.
28
REFRESH
29
REFRESH
30
INTEREST RATE – CAVEATS
We assumed one interest rate i, but in real world,
many rates.
Treasury bills (T-bills) mature in 1 year or less.
Treasury notes (T-notes) mature in 2-10 years.
Treasury bonds (T-bonds) mature 20-30 years.
Time deposits, money market savings account, etc.
The central bank can, through open market
operations, change the short-term interest rate.
QE vs. OMO
31
THE MONEY MARKET – SUMMARY
Interest rate i
Price or conversion ratio of current vs. future consumptions
Determined by demand and supply of money
So far, only focus on currency/cash controlled by the
central bank through OMO.
But M1 = currency/cash + checkable deposits.
Checkable deposits are supplied by (private) banks.
Can central bank still control i?
32
WHAT BANKS DO
Financial intermediaries: receive (borrow) funds from some and
provide (lend) to others.
Deposits: liabilities of banks
Loans, bonds, other assets: assets of banks
Subject to regulations because of the risk involved.
Credit risk: What if the loans cannot be repaid?
Liquidity risk: What if the loans cannot be called back when I need the
money?
Reserve ratio: % of deposits that must be kept as “reserve”
~10% in the US
The rest: loans, bonds, interbank loans, etc.
33
A RUN ON A BANK OF EAST ASIA BRANCH IN HONG
KONG, CAUSED BY "MALICIOUS RUMOURS" IN 2008.
34
Bank Runs
Rumors that a bank is not doing well and some loans will not
be repaid, will lead people to close their accounts at that bank.
If enough people do so, the bank will run out of reserves—a
bank run.
35
WHAT BANKS DO
Figure 4 - 6
The Balance Sheet of Banks
and the Balance Sheet of
the Central Bank, Revisited
36
OMO – BALANCE SHEET ANALYSIS
Central bank bought $10,000 bond from nonbank.
Central bank Nonbank (the public)
assets liabilities assets liabilities
bonds currency bonds -$10,000
+$10,000 (in circulation) currency (or cash)
+$10,000 +$10,000
Figure 4-A1 Determinants of the Demand and the Supply of Central Bank Money
39
SEE YOU NEXT TIME
Assigned reading:
Textbook Chap. 4 (4-3, 4-4, and appendix optional
but need to know the materials from lecture slides)
40