Title: Chapter 5. The Behavior of Interest Rates
1Chapter 5. The Behavior of Interest Rates
- asset demand
- bond market
- money demand and supply
2I. Asset demand
- which asset to choose?
- depends on RELATIVE comparisons between choices
3A. Wealth
- greater wealth, greater resources
wealth
Qd of assets
- holding other factors constant
4B. Expected returns
- based on expected cash flows,
- price changes
Exp ret. of asset
Qd of that asset
- holding other factors constant
5C. Risk
- variation in assets return
- people are risk averse
- prefer lower risk if other factors the same
risk of asset
Qd of that asset
- holding other factors constant
6D. Liquidity
- how easy is asset to convert to cash?
- Tbill easy
- real estate hard
liquidity of asset
Qd of that asset
- holding other factors constant
7II. The Bond Market
- A. Bond Demand
- bond buyers/ lenders/ savers
- look at Qd as a function of expected return, price
8example
- 1 year, zero coupon bond
- YTM exp. return
9Bond Price i exp. return 700 42.86 750 3
3.33 800 25 850 17.65 900 11.11 950
5.26
10Exp ret. of bond
Qd of bonds
price of bond
Qd of bonds
- so bond demand slopes down with respect to price
11Bond demand
12shifts in bond demand
demand for bonds (shift rt.)
wealth
13- a change in exp. interest rates
- rising interest rates decrease value of existing
bonds
int. rates expected to
demand for bonds (shift left)
14- a change in expected inflation
- rising inflation decreases real return
inflation expected to
demand for bonds (shift left)
15- a change in the risk of bonds relative to other
assets
relative risk of bonds
demand for bonds (shift left)
16- a change in liquidity of bonds relative to other
assets
relative liquidity of bonds
demand for bonds (shift rt.)
17B. Bond supply
- bond issuers/ borrowers
- look at Qs as a function of price, yield
18- lower bond prices
- higher bond yields
- more expensive to borrow
- lower Qs of bonds
- so bond supply slopes up with price
19bond supply
20shifts in bond supply
- a change in expected profits
- affects incentives to expand production
supply of bonds (shift rt.)
exp. profits
- exp. economic expansion shifts bond supply rt.
21- a change in expected inflation
- rising inflation decreases real cost of borrowing
supply of bonds (shift rt.)
exp. inflation
22- a change in government borrowing
- deficits increase Treasury issues
- surpluses decrease Treasury issues
supply of bonds (shift rt.)
deficits
23- demand for bonds
- supply of loanable funds
- supply of bonds
- demand for loanable funds
24C. Equilibrium interest rates
- changes when bond demand shifts,
- and/or bond supply shifts
- causes of shifts cause interest rates to change
25Example 1 the Fisher effect
26- exp. inflation rises to 4
- bond demand
- -- real return declines
- -- Bd decreases
- bond supply
- -- real cost of borrowing declines
- -- Bs increases
27- bond price falls
- interest rate rises
28Fisher effect
- expected inflation rises,
- nominal interest rates rise
29Example 2 economic slowdown
30- bond demand
- decline in income, wealth
- Bd decreases
- P falls, i rises
- bond supply
- decline in exp. profits
- Bs decreases
- P rises, i falls
31- shift Bs gt shift in Bd
- interest rate falls
32Why shift Bs gt shift Bd?
- changes in wealth are small
- response to change in exp. profits is large
- large cyclical swings in investment
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34example 6
- how does bond market explain
- behavior of 30 yr. Treasury yield?
- 2000-2001
- 30 yr. yield lt 10 yr. yield
- Usually,
- -- 30 yr gt 10 yr
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36Why the switch?
- Bond supply
- Treasury cut back on 30 yr issues
- -- due to budget surplus
- Bs decreases for 30 yr. Tbonds
- -- price rises, yield falls
- Bs of 10 yr. Tnotes not affected
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38II. Liquidity Preference
- money demand money supply
39A. Money demand
- consider M1
- assets earn little or no interest
- holding money vs. bonds
- bonds earn interest
- money is more liquid
- -- holding money shows preference for liquidity
40- interest rate is opportunity cost of holding
money - higher interest rate, hold less money
- money demand slopes down with respect to interest
rate
41money demand
42what shifts Md?
- a change in income
- income increase,
- buy more stuff
- save more money
- -- Md increases (shift rt.)
43- a change in price level
- prices increase,
- need more money
- to buy same amount of stuff
- -- Md increases
44- a change in technology
- ATM/ debit cards
- -- hold less cash
- -- easier access to savings
- -- hold less M1
- -- Md decreases
45B. Money supply
- controlled by central bank
- Federal Reserve System
- assume complete control
- Ms is vertical
46Md and Ms
47what shifts Ms?
- a change in Federal Reserve policy
- Fed increases Ms
- Fed decreases Ms
- Fed has several tools to do this
- -- chapter 17
48C. Money Interest Rates
- shifts in Md and/or Ms
- changes in interest rate
49example 3
- economic expansion increases income
50example 4
- economic expansion increases prices
51example 5
- Federal Reserve increases Ms
52Does an increase in Ms lower i ?
- example 5
- MS shifts right
- i falls
- this is called the liquidity effect,
- but it doesnt stop there.
53- but lower i will lead to economic expansion
- consumers borrow and buy
- firms borrow and invest
- income rises
- -- MD shifts right
- -- i rises
54income effect
55- economic expansion can lead to
- higher prices
- increase MD and i
56price level effect
57expected inflation effect
- if people expect increase in Ms,
- expect increase in P
- expect inflation
- Fisher effect
- increase in exp. inflation
- increase in i
58total effect of increase in Ms?
- depends on which effect is larger
- if liquidity effect is greater
- then i will fall
- if other effects are greater
- then i will rise
59evidence?
- little evidence that liquidity effect dominates
- perhaps in short-run
- increase in MS does not impact long-term rates as
much as exp. inflation
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61In summary,
- interest rates determined by supply and demand
- bond market
- money market
- shifts in demand/supply curves
- changes in general level of interest rates