Monetary Policy and Asset Prices
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM (PST)
- Arvind Krishnamurthy, Stanford University
The Imperfect Intermediation of Money-Like Assets
Abstract
We study supply-and-demand effects in the U.S. Treasury bill market bycomparing the returns on T-bills to the administered policy rate on the Federal Reserve’s
reverse repurchase (RRP) facility. In spite of the arguably more money-like properties
of an investment in RRP, we observe repeated episodes where one-month T-bill rates
fall well below expected RRP rates. This gap frequently exceeds 50 basis points in 2022,
before spiking to over 160 basis points during the initial period of uncertainty over the
debt ceiling in March and April of 2023. In an effort to understand this phenomenon, we
develop and test a simple model where the RRP-bill spread is policed by a group of
heterogeneous money funds, who differ in their elasticity of substitution between the
two assets. Our main finding is that when T-bills are scarce, and the spread is large, the
marginal money fund is more inelastic, as the more elastic funds have already exhausted
their holdings of T-bills. As a result, for a given shift in T-bill supply, the effect on rates
is an order of magnitude larger when T-bills are scarce, and when more money funds are
out of the market.
Fed Information Effects: Evidence from the Equity Term Structure
Abstract
Do investors interpret central bank target rate decisions as signals about the current state of the economy? We study this question using a short-term equity asset that entitles the owner to the near-term dividends of the aggregate stock market. We develop a stylized model of monetary policy and the equity term structure and derive tests of Fed information effects using the short-term asset announcement return. Consistent with the existence of information effects, we find that the short-term asset return in a 30-minute window around FOMC announcements loads positively on monetary policy surprises. Furthermore, the announcement return predicts near-term macroeconomic growth.Discussant(s)
Jiacui Li
,
University of Utah
Quentin Vandeweyer
,
University of Chicago
Michael Bauer
,
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
JEL Classifications
- G0 - General