Title: Central bank balance sheet
1Central bank balance sheet
- Central Bank gold standard
- __________________________________________________
___________________________ - Gold ( value PgG) Banknotes
- Loans Commercial bank deposits
- The Federal Reserve System fiat money
- __________________________________________________
________________________________ - Government securities (GS) Federal Reserve
notes (CV) - Loans to financial institutions (DL)
Commercial bank deposits (BD) - Foreign exchange reserves (FX, value) Other
liabilities (e.g Treas. Deposits) - Other assets
- C Federal Reserve notes held by non-bank public
(currency in circulation) - V Federal Reserve notes held by banks in vaults
or ATM - BD Commercial bank deposits at the Fed
- R Bank reserves V BD
- B Monetary base C R (the Feds primary
liabilities)
2US Monetary System
- Fed
- __________________________________________________
________________________________ - Government securities (TS) Currency (C) (Base
money) - Discount loans (DL) Reserves (R) (Base
money) - Foreign exchange reserves (FX) Other
liabilities (e.g. Treas. Deposits) - Other assets
-
- Link to current Fed balance sheet http//www.fede
ralreserve.gov/releases/h41/Current/ - Of note
- Securities held outright
- TAC and discount loans
- Maiden Lane
- Other assets
- Currency in circulation
- Other liabilities include Treasury deposits
- Reserves
-
3US Monetary System
- Fed
- __________________________________________________
________________________________ - Government securities (GS) Currency (C) (Base
money) - Discount loans (DL) Reserves (R) (Base money)
- Foreign exchange reserves (FX) Other
liabilities (Treasury Deposits) - Other assets
-
- Commercial Banks
- __________________________________________________
_______________________________ - Reserves (R) Checkable deposits (D)
- Bank loans (L) Loans from the central bank
(DL) - Other assets (e.g. govt securities) Capital
(ownership claims) -
- Private sector (non-bank
public) - __________________________________________________
__________________________ - Checkable deposits (D) (Money) Bank loans (L)
- Currency (C) (Money) Other liabilities
- Other assets (e.g. physical capital) Net worth
4US Monetary System
MONEY SUPPLY
BASE MONEY
5US Monetary System
- Money supply Base Multiplier
- Multiplier is the multiple by which the money
supply exceeds the base. Under a fractional
reserve system with bank loans and credit money,
this will be greater than 1. - A simple model of the money supply process
- Fed ? Base (through its balance sheet)
- Fed, banks, public ? Multiplier (and independent
of the base)
6The Feds control of the monetary base
- The following cause the base to rise (all other
factors the same) - Purchase of government securities
- Increase in discount loans
- Increase in foreign reserves
- Increase in other assets
- Decrease in other liabilities
7The Feds control of the monetary base
- T-bill purchase by the Fed
- FED
- __________________________________________________
____ - T-bills 1000 1000 Base
- Increase in Treasury deposits (e.g. public pays
taxes) - FED
- __________________________________________________
____ - -1000 Base
- 1000 Treas. Dep.
- Sterilized discount loan
- FED
- __________________________________________________
____ - T-bills -1000 0 Base
- DL 1000
8The Feds control of the monetary base
- The Fed and banks accommodate the publics demand
for currency. This reflects the publics
preference for the composition of money it holds.
But the base can be independent of this
preference. - FED
- __________________________________________________
____ - 1000 Currency
- -1000 Reserves
9The monetary base and the governments budget
- The governments budget constraint
- Government expenditures during the year tax
revenues treasury securities sold to banks and
the public treasury securities sold to the Fed. - Budget deficits increase the monetary base
(monetization) only if the Fed buys new
securities
10The monetary base and the governments budget
- Government deficit 100 billion during the
year. Fed purchases half of the security issue - The purchase FED
- __________________________________________________
____ - T-bills 50 billion 50 billion Treas.
Deposits - Treasury spends FED
- __________________________________________________
____ - 50 billion Base
- -50 billion Treas. Deposits
11The money multiplier
- Fed
- _______________________________________________
- GS C
- R
-
-
- Commercial Banks
- ______________________________________________
- R D
- L
- M C D
- B C R
- L D R (assuming other assets/liabilities DL
0) - M/B m (CD)/(CR) (k1)/(kq) 1
- L/B ? (DR)/(CR) (1q)/(kq)
- M mB ? ?M m?B
- L ?B ? ?L ??B
12The money multiplier
- m is the money multiplier. We assume it is
determined independently of the base. - ? is the loan multiplier. It is also independent
of the base. - k is the currency-deposit ratio, determined by
the preferences of the non-bank public. - q is the desired reserve ratio, determined partly
by the Fed and partly by banks. - We assume that both k and q are independent of
the quantity of base money.
13The money multiplier
- Example Fed purchase of t-bill
- ?B 1,000
- q 0.10
- k 0.50
- ? m 2.50
- ? ? 1.50
- ?M 2.501000 2,500
- ?L 1.501000 1,500
- ?M ?C?D (1k)?D
- ?D ?M/(1k) 1,667
- ?C ?M ?D 833
- ?R ?B ?C 167
14The multiplier process in a simple case
- Assume k0 (no currency) and q 10. Consider
balance sheet effects of a t-bill purchase - Central Bank
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - T-bills 1000 1000 Reserves (R)
-
- Bank of America
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - Reserves (R) 1000 1000 Deposits (D)
-
- Bank of America
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - Loans (L) 900
- Reserves (R) -900
- Bank of America (net effect)
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - R 100 1000 D
- L 900
15The multiplier process in a simple case
-
- Goldman Sachs
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - R 900 900 D
-
- Goldman Sachs
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - L 810
- Reserves (R) -810
- Goldman Sachs (net effect)
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - R 90 900 D
- L 810
16The multiplier process in a simple case
-
- Citi
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - R 810 810 D
-
- Citi
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - L 729
- Reserves (R) -729
- Citi (net effect)
- __________________________________________________
____________________ - R 81 810 D
- L 729
- and so on
17The multiplier process in a simple case
- Summary of the entire process involving the
banking system - ?R 1000
- ? L 900 810 729 9,000
- ? D 1000 900 810 10,000
- m (1/q) 10
- ? D 10?R 1000 (which is the change in M
given no currency). - The money supply increases by a multiple of the
initial injection of reserves because of bank
lending. - Removing reserves from the banking system will
have the opposite effect (negative signs).
18Factors determining the reserve ratio, q
- q is determined by Fed and optimizing behavior by
banks. Desired reserves consist of required
reserves and excess reserves. - Required reserves (determined by the Fed)
- Likelihood of net deposit withdrawals (excess
reserves determined by banks) - Higher deposit variability, higher the
likelihood of net cash outflows ? higher is q. - Perceived risk of loans/alternative investments
(excess reserves determined by banks). - Interest rate on loans relative to interest rate
paid by Fed on reserves (excess reserves
determined by banks). This spread reflects the
opportunity cost of reserves higher the spread,
lower q.
19Change in q
- The money multiplier is negatively related to q.
- If q .25 (instead of .10, with k.50) in the
previous example, m 2. - As banks accumulate reserves, the monetary base
can support a smaller amount of deposits and thus
money because banks make fewer loans for any
given injection of reserves.
20Change in q
- Suppose market interest rates on loans rise.
- q .10, k 0 Banking system
- __________________________________________________
____ - R 1000 10,000 D
- L 9000
-
- q .20, k0 Banking system
- __________________________________________________
____ - R 1000 5,000 D
- L 4000
- m falls from 10 to 5. As loans are paid off,
banks will make fewer loans, so that deposits
decrease. Remember that total reserves are
determined by Fed.
21 Factors determining the currency ratio, k
- k is determined by optimal behavior of the
private sector, in this case households (the
non-bank sector). - Interest rates on deposits (negative effect)
- Risk of bank deposits (positive effect)
- Transactions costs of cash versus checks (the
more convenient is cash relative to checks,
higher k)
22Change in k
- The money multiplier is negatively related to k.
(A change in k has a larger proportional effect
on the denominator.) - m (k1)/(kq)
- k .50, q .10 ? m 2.5
- k .60, q .10 ? m 2.3
23Change in k
- q .10, k .40 ? m 2.8
- Fed
- ___________________________________________
- GS 10000 8000 C
- 2000 R
-
- Banking system
- ___________________________________________
- R 2000 20000 D
- L 18000
- B 10,000
- M 28,000
- Banking panic
- q .10, k .90 ? m 1.9
- Fed
- ___________________________________________
- GS 10000 9000 C
- 1000 R
-
- Banking system
- ___________________________________________
- R 1000 10000 D
- L 9000
- B 10,000
- M 19,000
- Note The composition of the base has changed as
public converts deposits to cash. The initial
withdrawal of 1000 leads to a large change in D
and M because of the decline in bank lending.
24Change in k
- How could the Fed respond to 9,000 decline in M?
To stabilize M, open market purchase would work
(reserve compensation). - ?M m ?B
- ?B ?M / m 9000/1.9 4,737
-
- Fed
- __________________________________________
- GS 14,737 13,263 C
- 1,474 R
- Banking system
- __________________________________________
- R 1,474 14,737 D
- L 13,263
- In current environment, q and k are rising, the
multiplier is falling. Thus some of the recent
increase in base money is compensation for
falling multiplier, and not necessarily
inflationary
25Money during the Great Depression
- Stock market crash in 1929, and other factors,
led to banking panic and runs from October 1930
to March 1933 loss of confidence in the system. - Beginning Oct. 1930, we see C rising quickly, and
D falling, as the public rushed to banks. - Reserves and monetary base fairly steady.
- Money stock fell drastically from 1930 to 1933,
despite steady growth in the monetary base.
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29The Check Tax
- In 1932, in the midst of the contraction of money
and credit, Congress imposed a 2 cent tax on
checks written (independent of the amount of the
check). This increased the costs of using checks,
and thus reduced the relative cost of using cash.
We estimated an additional 10-15 decline in
money caused by this tax. - Justification for the tax to balance the
federal budget.
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31Current trends
- Currency-checkable deposit ratio has risen
- Financial innovations reducing value of demand
deposits at banks. - Foreign demand for US currency.
- This has caused instability in M1, but M2 growth
has been steady.
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352008 data
362008 data
37Private banknotes and the multiplier
- Since 1914, private banks have not issued
banknotes Fed has monopoly over currency. As we
have seen, the quantity of money supply is
sensitive to changes in the composition of money,
through the currency ratio k. - However, private banknote issue can alleviate
this problem in the face of currency runs (as
opposed to redemption runs).
38Private banknotes and the multiplier
- An example assume Fed issues only reserves, no
currency. Banknotes serve as currency. Banks hold
same fraction of reserves on banknotes as on
deposits. - k 1/3 Banking system
- ______________________________________________
- R 1000 2500 Banknotes
- L 9000 7500 D
- M 10,000 B 1000
- k 1/2 Banking system
- ______________________________________________
- R 1000 5000 Banknotes
- L 9000 5000 D
- M 10,000 B 1000 ? change in composition
affects neither the base nor the multiplier.
39Balance sheet analysis of TARP
- US Treasury
- __________________________________________
- Tr. Dep. 500 500 T-bills
-
- Public
- __________________________________________
- T-bills 500
- D -500
-
- Banking system
- __________________________________________
- R -500 -500 D
-
- Fed
- __________________________________________
- -500 R
- 500 Tr. Dep.
40Balance sheet analysis of TARP
- US Treasury
- __________________________________________
- Tr. Dep. -500
- Toxic assets 500
- Public
- __________________________________________
- 0 0
-
-
- Banking system
- __________________________________________
- R 500
- Toxic assets -500
- Fed
- __________________________________________
- 500 R
- -500 Tr. Dep.
41Balance sheet analysis of TARP
- US Treasury
- __________________________________________
- Tr. Dep. 300
- Toxic assets -500
- TPL 200
- TPL taxpayer liability
- Public
- __________________________________________
- Assets 300 200 TPL
- D -300 -200 NW
-
- Banking system
- __________________________________________
- R -300 -300 D
-
- Fed
- __________________________________________
- -300 R 300 Tr. Dep.
42Balance sheet analysis of TARP
- US Treasury
- __________________________________________
- Tr. Dep. -300 -500 T-bills
- TPL -200
-
- Public
- __________________________________________
- T-bills -500 -200 TPL
- D 300
-
- Banking system
- __________________________________________
- R 300 300 D
-
- Fed
- __________________________________________
- 300 R -300 Tr. Dep.
43Balance sheet analysis of TARP
- US Treasury
- __________________________________________
- 0 0
-
-
- Public
- __________________________________________
- Assets 300 -200 NW
- D -500
-
- (If Treasury sells assets for, say, 600, then
assets go up by 600, D goes down by 500, and NW
increases by 100.)
- Banking system
- __________________________________________
- Toxic assets -500 -500 D
-
- Fed
- __________________________________________
- 0 0
- Summary Ultimately, Public converts deposits
into assets, but loses 200 of wealth (because
Treasury sells at a loss). Banks assets and
liabilities fall, so asset-to-capital ratio
rises.
44Balance sheet analysis of capital infusion plan
- US Treasury
- __________________________________________
- Tr. Dep. 250 250 T-bills
- Public
- __________________________________________
- T-bills 250
- D -250
- Banking system
- __________________________________________
- R - 250 - 250 D
- Fed
- __________________________________________
- -250 R
- 250 Tr. Dep.
45Balance sheet analysis of capital infusion plan
- US Treasury
- __________________________________________
- Tr. Dep. - 250
- Bank equity 250
- Public
- __________________________________________
-
-
- Banking system
- __________________________________________
- R 250 250 Equity
- Fed
- __________________________________________
- 250 R
- -250 Tr. Dep.
46Balance sheet analysis of capital infusion plan
- US Treasury
- __________________________________________
- Bank equity 250 250 T-bills
-
- Public
- __________________________________________
- T-bills 250
- D -250
-
- Banking system
- __________________________________________
- -250 D
- 250 Equity
- Fed
- __________________________________________
- 0 0
-
- Summary Ultimately, Public (through the
Treasury) converts bank liabilities into bank
equity. Banks asset-to-debt ratio increases. (If
the Fed monetizes, it buys 250 t-bills from
public, but R would go up by 500. )
47The Federal Reserve System
- Federal Reserve Act of 1914 created the Federal
Reserve system in three parts - Federal Reserve Board (US Treasury Secretary,
Comptroller of the Currency, plus five),
headquartered in D.C. - 12 district banks (Atlanta, NY, Boston, etc.).
Board of each elects a President. - member commercial banks, which buy stock in the
Fed. (Hence, the Fed is privately owned!)
National banks must be members. - Amendments in 1933, 1935
- Reconstituted FRB as Board of Governors of the
Fed, with 7 members appointed by the President,
each for 14 year terms. - Created FOMC, and authorized open market
operations. Consists of 7 Board members plus 5
presidents who serve on a rotating basis (as
voting members). NY Fed President always on as
voting member. - Authorized reserve requirements on demand
deposits of member banks (now on all banks, since
1980 DIDMCA). - Section 13(3) In unusual and exigent
circumstances, the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, by the affirmative vote
of not less than five members, may authorize any
Federal reserve bank to discount for any
individual, partnership, or corporation, notes,
drafts, and bills of exchange when such notes,
drafts, and bills of exchange are indorsed or
otherwise secured to the satisfaction of the
Federal Reserve bank. - This section has been invoked recently to allow
the Fed to buy commercial paper and make loans to
JPMorgan and AIG. - The Federal Reserve Act. http//www.federalreserve
.gov/aboutthefed/fract.htm
48Fed Independence
- Although Fed is technically privately owned, it
is run by the government. But it has been set up
to be independent of the branches of government.
This is important because of the pressures for
manipulating the money stock for political
reasons. - An independent central bank is (potentially) a
good substitute for a commodity money standard. A
credible central bank can provide monetary
discipline in the absence of an underlying
commodity.
49Tools of monetary policy
- The Fed has the following tools to control the
money supply (and thereby influence interest
rates, output and inflation) - Reserve requirements
- Open market operations
- Discount policy (very old)
- Interest payments on bank reserves (brand new)
50Reserve requirements
- 0 on checkable deposits up to 9.3 million, 3 on
deposits between 9.3 million and 43.9 million,
and 10 beyond. - An increase in reserve requirements will reduce
the money multiplier and the money stock
(assuming desired excess reserves do not change
to offset). - The Fed seldom systematically changes reserve
requirements for policy purposes. -
51Reserve Requirements
- 1 7 14 31 38
45 - ----------------------------------------------
------------- - Tu M M Th
W - Computation period Maintenance period
- Computation period daily average balance on
checking accounts and vault cash ? required
reserves determined. - Maintenance period must hold average daily
balance as deposit at the fed equal to difference
between required reserves and vault cash.
52Reserve Requirements
- Computation period Tuesday, May 27 to Monday,
June 9. - Average daily balance of banks checking accounts
75 - Average daily vault cash 1 million.
- Required reserves (0.03)(43.9 9.3) (0.10)
(75 43.9) 4.12 million. - Required reserve balance to be held as Fed
deposit during the maintenance period (beginning
June 26) 3.12 million.
53Reserve requirements
- Until recently, reserves paid no interest. In
this case, a reserve requirement is just like a
tax. - Assume a bank holds no reserves, and thus lends
all deposits. If r is the interest rate charged
on loans (L) and i the rate charged on deposits
(D), then the banks profits are - Profit rL iD (r i)D
- With a reserve requirement (q) on deposits
- Profit r(D R) iD r(D qD) iD r(1
q) i D - Example r 8, i 2, and q 10, instead of
6 return, banks earn 5.2
54Open market operations
- Purchases and sales of government securities on
the open market (i.e. just like everyone else who
buys and sells securities). They give the Fed
direct control over bank reserves.
FOMC
Policy directive
Trading Desk
Securities markets
Purchases/sales
Target level for reserves
55Open market operations
- Outright purchases or sales
- Repurchase agreements (repos) buy govt
securities from a dealer, who agrees to
repurchase at a given price. - Dynamic active change in policy.
- Defensive sterilization of other changes in base
or multiplier. - Feds balance sheet (again) http//www.federalres
erve.gov/releases/h41/Current/
56Discount policy
- The Feds oldest tool, and means of serving as
lender of last resort. -
- Fed
- _____________________________________
- DL 1 million 1 million R
- Banking system
- _____________________________________
- R 1 million 1 million DL
- The discount loan shows up as a liability to the
bank, but provides the bank additional liquidity
(reserves) to make loans or pay of other
liabilities. Alternatively, the Fed might require
collateral.
57Discount policy
- Primary credit for healthy banks in need of
temporary liquidity funds are unrestricted but
are charged a penalty rate (say 25 basis points
above the federal funds rate). Prior to 2003,
discount rate was set below fed funds rate. - Secondary credit for less healthy banks who
dont qualify for primary credit rate set at 50
basis points above federal funds rate, and funds
are restricted. - For primary and seasonal credit, the Fed sets a
discount rate, then banks request a loan amount. - http//www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h41/C
urrent/ -
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59New discount policy tools
- Term Auction Facility (Dec. 12, 2007)
- Primary Dealers Credit Facility (Dec. 2007)
- Term Securities Lending Facility (Dec. 2007)
- Asset-backed Commercial Paper MMMF Facility
(Sept. 2008) - Commercial Paper Funding Facility (Oct. 7, 2008)
- Another facility to buy assets/make loans to MMMF
(Oct. 21, 2008) - Prior to these dates, primary and secondary
credit were extended to banks, for overnight
loans backed by safe and secure collateral. These
new tools broadly extend the scope of discount
lending to non-banks, non-financial institutions,
for longer terms (30 to 85 days), and secured by
potentially distressed assets. - The injections of funds through these facilities
has been massive - http//research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/BORRO
W?cid122
60Term Auction Facility
- Fed sets the amount of the funds it is willing to
lend, and lets banks anonymously bid for these
funds. The bid includes the amount requested and
an interest rate. The Fed accepts bids from those
banks offering the highest yields until the funds
run out. Originally set up as temporary, but it
is likely to remain permanent. - For example, suppose the Fed offers 20 billion
for auction, and receives bids totaling 30
billion. Then, it orders the bids from highest
yield to lowest, and chooses the offers with the
highest yields until the 20 is allocated. The
actual rate charged is the lowest accepted bid
rate.
61Term Auction Facility
Rate
5
4
3
bid
20
30
62Sterilization of lending facilities
- To a large extent, the Fed has sterilized new
lending, to prevent reserves from rising too
much. - This can be seen from the Feds balance sheet
large decreases in t-bills held outright. - Selected balance sheet items http//research.stlo
uisfed.org/publications/usfd/page16.pdf
63Sterilization of lending facilities
- To sterilize, Fed needs enough t-bills to sell.
The Treasury has been issuing securities to the
Fed for this purpose. In effect, the Fed buys
t-bills issued by Treasury, but pays for them by
crediting the Treasurys deposits, not by
creating reserves. - See Feds balance sheet Treasury deposits,
special financing account. - Fed
- __________________________________________________
___ - T-bills 459 billion 459 billion Treas.
Dep. - Fed
- __________________________________________________
___ - T-bills -100 billion -100 billion Reserves
64An additional new tool
- As part of the Emergency Economic Stabilization
Act of 2008, the Fed was given authority to pay
interest on bank reserves. - Allows the Fed to set interest rate policy
independently of liquidity policy. - Open market operations will become less important
as a tool, because adjustments in reserves will
not be necessary to target interest rates.