monetary policy Archives - MKTPlace https://mktplace.org/tag/monetary-policy/ all about trading, Fintech, Business, AI & technology in one place Thu, 25 Mar 2021 11:59:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://mktplace.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/favicon.png monetary policy Archives - MKTPlace https://mktplace.org/tag/monetary-policy/ 32 32 Fed’s Yellen Hints Rate Hike, but Stresses Patience https://mktplace.org/feds-yellen-hints-at-2015-rate-hike-but-stresses-patience/ https://mktplace.org/feds-yellen-hints-at-2015-rate-hike-but-stresses-patience/#respond Thu, 26 Feb 2015 07:00:19 +0000 http://www.tradersdna.com/?p=33107

The Federal Reserve could begin normalizing interest rates this year, but won’t rush to do so amid tepid wage growth and tame inflation, central bank Chairwoman Janet Yellen said on Tuesday.

Testifying before Congress, Yellen sought to lay the groundwork for how the Federal Reserve would begin raising interest rates after more than six years. She continued to stress patience in normalizing monetary policy, echoing the Federal Open Market Committee’s January rate statement.

The Federal Reserve “will at some point begin considering an increase in the target range for the federal funds rate on a meeting-by-meeting basis,” Yellen told Congress on Tuesday. However, Yelllen was careful to manage expectations, stressing that the Fed’s eventual change in language would not necessarily translate into a shift in policy.

“It is important to emphasize that a modification of the forward guidance should not be read as indicating that the [Federal Reserve] will necessarily increase the target rate in a couple of meetings,” she added. “The modification should be understood as reflecting the [Federal Reserve’s] judgment that conditions have improved to the point where it will soon be the case that a change in the target range could be warranted at any meeting,”

The data-driven Fed has relied on the economic indicators to adjust monetary policy, having closed the books on a record bond-buying program only last October. Yellen said on Tuesday that unemployment was still too high, despite acknowledging broad improvements “on many dimensions.” Unemployment edged up slightly to 5.7 percent in January as workforce participation increased. Employers added 257,000 jobs in January and have added an average of 336,000 jobs per month over the last three months.

While several Fed officials have indicated they would like to have the option to raise interest rates in June, the minutes of the January FOMC meetings revealed growing concerns about tame inflation and a volatile global economy. For its part, the Fed has remained consistent in its messaging since December, when it first started using the word patience to describe interest rate adjustments.

The FOMC’s next meetings will be held in Washington on March 17-18. They will be accompanied by revised GDP, inflation and employment forecasts, as well as the closely followed “dot-plot” chart of interest rate expectations. The Fed’s December forecast showed policymakers anticipated interest rates to rise to 1.125 percent by the end of the year.

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Bank of England Votes Unanimously to Keeping Interest Rates Low https://mktplace.org/bank-of-england-votes-unanimously-to-keeping-interest-rates-low/ https://mktplace.org/bank-of-england-votes-unanimously-to-keeping-interest-rates-low/#respond Thu, 19 Feb 2015 14:00:12 +0000 http://www.tradersdna.com/?p=33060

Lawmakers at the Bank of England voted unanimously to keep interest rates at a record low at this month’s policy meetings, although signs of division re-emerged about the outlook on monetary policy.

The BOE voted 9-0 in favour of keeping interest rates at a record-low of 0.5 percent and the size of the asset purchase facility at £375 billion, the minutes of the February 4-5 Committee policy meetings revealed today.

“In the light of that aim, and the Committee’s latest set of economic projections, all Committee members agreed that it was appropriate to leave the stance of monetary policy unchanged at this meeting,” the minutes revealed. “Given the outlook for inflation beyond the short term, there could well be a case for an increase in Bank Rate later this year.”

Although policymakers did not rule out a rate increase this year, one member did indicate that the Bank’s next move could be to loosen monetary policy rather than tighten it. Those sentiments were reflected last week after the BOE raised the possibility of cutting interest rates in light of plunging inflation.

BOE Governor Mark Carney expects inflation to fall below zero in the short term before rebounding in the next two years. Britain’s annual inflation rate fell to 0.3 percent in January, the lowest level since record keeping began in 1989, stemming from lower gasoline and food prices. This is a welcome sign for cash-strapped consumers, who have struggled with stubbornly low earnings growth for much of the recovery.

Signs of wage growth have reappeared in recent months. Average earnings including bonus rose 2.1 percent annually in the three months through December, outstripping inflation by the widest margin since 2008, the Office for National Statistics reported today. Economists forecast an increase of 1.7 percent after wage growth averaged 1.8 percent in the three months through November.

Excluding bonuses, average earnings rose 1.7 percent annually between October and December, slightly below November’s 1.7 percent pace.

The UK labour market continued to improve at the end of last year, with the unemployment rate falling from 5.8 percent to 5.7 percent in the three months through December. Jobless benefits, which are a narrower measure of unemployment, declined by 38,600 to 823,000 in January, compared to a median estimate calling for a 25,000 drop.

The BOE expects unemployment to fall further over the forecast period, as the labour market gradually returns to full capacity.

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How Do Central Banks Affect Exchange Rates https://mktplace.org/central-banks-affect-exchange-rates/ https://mktplace.org/central-banks-affect-exchange-rates/#respond Mon, 09 Feb 2015 17:00:56 +0000 http://www.tradersdna.com/?p=32945

We all know that central bank decisions are some of the most influential occurrences on the forex markets, but how do the actual mechanics work? When the Bank of Japan lowers interest rates, the SNB stops buying Euros, or the ECB starts buying bonds, what’s going on?
Here we’re going to have a look at the basic mechanics that cause central bank decisions to hit the forex markets. The important thing to remember is that old solid Supply and Demand. Currencies trade based on this in the same way as any other commodity. Central Banks have to affect on, the other or both in order to change exchange rates.

Interest rate changes
Back before 2008 central bank’s simply wouldn’t attempt to intervene overbearingly in markets and interest rate changes were the only likely outcome of a meeting of the Federal Reserve. When the Federal Reserve changes its interest rate, it changes the relative benefit of keeping money in one currency instead of another.

If the central bank increases the interest rate, bank rates and bond rates in the United States tend to go up. If everything else remains equal the US dollar is more attractive to hold that the euro or yen and money begins to flow into the country’s investments.

Basically the price of the currencies with higher interest rates will go up until no more money can be made through simple transfers. On the financial markets, as you can see after major interest rate decisions are made, this happens almost instantly.

Direct market intervention
This is the actual buying and selling of currencies by central banks designed to influence exchange rates. At its simplest level it involves affecting the demand for one currency in another by central bank intervention. It can take several different forms in specific cases, however.

The best example in recent years has been the intervention of the Swiss National Bank which set the maximum exchange rate at 1.2 Franc to the Euro in 2011. The central bank kept its currency low against the euro by printing francs and using them to buy euros, meaning there would always be infinite supply of Francs at that level and none above it. Nobody is going to sell 1.3 francs for a euro when the central bank is selling them at 1.2.

This, of course, was risky for the Swiss National Bank and was a last gasp policy designed to reduce the impact of serious deflation brought on by a flight to safety during the financial crisis.

The other, more common side of direct intervention is propping up a currency: a practice Russia attempted sporadically through 2014. This involves buying your own currency with the central bank’s foreign currency reserves. This is an unstable practice that can result in the bank running out of reserves, and the weakening of the currency accelerating as a result.

Quantitative easing and other innovations
Less understood than direct intervention because of its novelty, QE involves printing currency in order to buy securities, i.e. bonds and equities. The US began doing this several years ago and was followed by the ECB, the BoE and the BoJ. The way it affects currencies is still debatable, but the central theory references two factors: increase in currency supply and lower interest rates.

Buying US treasuries at such a level means that yields fall substantially, lowering demand for the dollar to buy them in and having a knock-on effect on interest rates across the economy, and having the same effect, at one level, as a change in interest rates.

Increasing the money supply by such a margin, 60 billion euro in the case of the ECB program, every month creates a downward pressure on the price of the currency compared to others.

This has been the basic effect of easing programs in the US, Japan and the UK, but the ultimate result of the European program remains to be seen. Further study as central bank innovations keep popping up will result in greater understanding of these mechanics.

Predicting movement

The above gives an outline of the mechanics that central bank decisions drive on the market, but there’s so many factors affecting the supply and demand for currencies that none is a guaranteed bet. Take any currency chart and look at it through the last seven or eight years to get an idea of the unpredictable volatility that drives forex at certain points in time.

Knowing is half the battle, however, so getting used to the way that central bank decisions are made, and learning about these mechanics and the decision making apparatuses behind them will put you ahead of the average market participant and give you insight into the more complicated derivative results of central bank intervention.

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A Trader’s Guide to The IMF https://mktplace.org/traders-guide-imf/ https://mktplace.org/traders-guide-imf/#respond Sat, 07 Feb 2015 07:00:10 +0000 http://www.tradersdna.com/?p=32952

The International Monetary Fund is one of the most important market movers out there. Its actions have caused turmoil on the markets in recent years, and since its inception. Few traders understand the importance of the institution, however, and fewer still are able to predict its effects on the world markets.
This guide takes a look at the IMF from the basics of what it is and how it works to more complicated descriptions of how it pushes world markets and why traders should be keeping an eye on it.

What is the IMF?
The IMF was set up by the Bretton Woods agreement as part of the system of weights and governance that kept semi-fixed exchange rates in place across the world. It’s goal was then, and is still, international monetary cooperation.

The institution has several principles that are pillars in its vision of a globalized free trade system. It wants to minimize trade imbalances and create currencies that float freely with maximum stability, an approach designed to maximize trade between all countries. It is one of the three most important multinational economic institutions, alongside the World Bank and the World Trade Organization.

How does it work?
The IMF is an organization of 188 countries, each giving its share of funds to the organization. Operating like a company, the funds also determine the amount of votes each country has. That means that the United States, which has the most votes, has close to three times the voting power of the second biggest contributor Japan.

Policy is decided by the Board of Governors, a body made up of two representatives from each country, a governor and an alternate. These are usually the highest profile financial controllers from the respective countries. For example, the United Kingdom’s representative is the Chancellor George Osborne. His alternate is the Governor of the Bank of England Mark Carney.

The Board of Governors delegates day to day operations to the Executive Board of 24 members. 8 of these members: the USA, Japan, Germany, France, the UK, China, Russia and Saudi Arabia get their own representative. The other 16 spots represent constituencies of between 4 and 22 countries each.

The IMF board elects a Managing director, currently Christine Lagarde.

Why does it affect my investment?
There’s three basic ways that the IMF works on the financial markets, the first is through information and analysis releases, the second through its existence as a lender of last resort, and the third in its actual dealings with countries. We’ll deal with each of these issues separately here, though they’re often intertwined.

Information and analysis

The International Monetary Fund is constantly releasing information about the basic state of the world economy, from simple data collection to forward looking analyses of global and regional trends. This is some of the most highly regarded economic data and analysis on the planet, and it has been known to move markets.

Example of important, market-moving reports include the organization’s World Economic Outlook, anything it releases on a country in an IMF program, and its case studies on economic performance and reforms.

Lender of last resort

The IMF acts as a lender of last resort for the lenders of last resort. This is a passive effect of the organization. Its impact is priced into the market, and it’s generally clear that countries have options other than outright default when they run into financial trouble.

This may not effect the market directly, but it has a logically compressing impact on bond yields around the world. Recent action in Europe has strengthened this part of the IMF’s reputation. This effect is implicit, meaning it will only move markets if it is questioned, or confidence in its ability to achieve this end falls.

IMF loans

When a country hits rock bottom and it can no longer afford the interest rates the markets levy, it heads to the IMF for a dig-out. Conditions are usually attached to these loans, and are sometimes controversial. As can be seen from several events in recent years, markets stand up and react when the IMF steps in.

This has been most apparent in Europe in recent years. IMF intervention in countries like Greece and Ireland forced changes in government policy, and completely revolutionized the way European bonds were treated by the world market.

This is the most dramatic way in which the IMF has an effect on markets, but it is not as uncommon as might be believed. Loans from the IMF have increased in recent decades, and dozens of countries are currently in some kind of IMF program.

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6 Central Banks That Rule Forex https://mktplace.org/6-central-banks-rule-forex/ https://mktplace.org/6-central-banks-rule-forex/#respond Mon, 02 Feb 2015 16:00:53 +0000 http://www.tradersdna.com/?p=32918

The role of central banks in deciding exchange rate levels cannot be overestimated. If you want to trade currencies you need to understand what a central bank is, and how it controls exchange rates.

The actions of these institutions drives the day to-day fluctuations in the forex markets, but who are they, and how do they work? Here’s  a look at the 6 most important central banks in the world, and the way they make their decisions.

1. The Federal Reserve
This is the big one. The Federal Reserve is the most talked about, and by far the most important, central bank on the planet. The Dollar is the currency of world trade.

How does it work? The seven governors, appointed by the president and confirmed by the senate, serve 14-year terms. The meet once every six weeks with 5 of the 12 presidents of the district reserve banks to form the Federal Open Market Committee. This committee decides interest rates, and more dramatic actions by the central bank.

What does it want? The Federal Reserve’s dual mandate is full employment and stable prices, meaning it wants to keep both inflation and unemployment low. This goal, which is wider than that of many other central banks, is what allowed actions like quantitative easing to take place based on unemployment figures rather than inflation numbers.

2. The European Central Bank
The guardian of the European common currency, the ECB was set up by a treaty between the member states of the Eurozone, which now number 19.

How does it work?  The decision making body of the bank is made up of the 19 heads of regional central banks and six executive board members nominated by the governments of the bloc in concord with each other. The bank’s governing council meets twice per month in Frankfurt, and announces its monetary policy decisions at the first of these.

What does it want? Enshrined in treaty, the objective of the ECB is clear: maintain price stability in the Eurozone. This is the reason that the ECB was not able to introduce QE-style program to allay the effects of unemployment. The bank was only allowed to interfere on the grounds of dangerous deflation.

3. The Bank of Japan
The keeper of the Yen since the nineteenth century Meiji Restoration, the BoJ is the monetary policy decision maker of Japan.

How does it work? The committee of the bank of Japan is made up of nine members, including a governor and two deputy governors. The committee meets once or twice per month in order to decide the country’s monetary policy.

What does it want? The bank of Japan doesn’t have the kind of clearly defined goals that the Fed or ECB have, making it a little less predictable. It’s mandate gives it reign to implement monetary policy and ensure the soundness of the financial system while maintaining price stability, though it doesn’t put any of these goals on a pedestal above the others.

4. The Bank of England
By far the oldest bank on this list, and the one that the rest have based themselves off of, the Bank of England has been around for more than three hundred years.

How does it work? Tricky because of its reliance on British traditional politics for guidance, the Bank of England’s monetary policy is decided by a committee which is made up of nine members and meets once every month.

What does it want? Price stability is currently the main goal of the BoE, but that can change as it’s the government that chooses the inflation target, and the overall objective can be amended by act of parliament. If the bank misses that target by a wide margin it has to explain its mistakes to the Chancellor of the Exchequer.

5. The Swiss National Bank
Established in 1907, the Swiss National Bank floats 45% of its shares on the stock market, and is the only central bank on this list that actually makes a profit.

How does it work? The SNB is supposed to conduct it monetary policy decisions as if it were an independent central bank. The governing board of the SNB has three members who are responsible for decisions on monetary policy. It decides interest rates quarterly.

What does it want? Price stability, including a definition thereof, is the central goal of the Swiss National Bank, though it has a secondary goal of accounting for economic developments in order to foster an atmosphere that supports economic growth.

6. The People’s Bank of China
Unusually opaque, the People’s Bank of China acts as the central bank for the yuan. It was the only bank in the communist country for decades, but the liberalization of the banking system left the PBC squarely with the duties of a central bank.

How does it work? China’s monetary policy is decided by  a committee which includes the governor and two deputy-governors of the PBC, along with representatives from government, regulators and an academic. The committee meets quarterly.

What does it want? The goals of the monetary policy committee are set to be prescribed by the State Council, meaning they’re unusually amendable.

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