Home   News   Features   Interviews   Magazine Archive   Symposium   Industry Awards  
Subscribe
Securites Lending Times logo
Leading the Way

Global Securities Finance News and Commentary
≔ Menu
Securites Lending Times logo
Leading the Way

Global Securities Finance News and Commentary
News by section
Subscribe
⨂ Close
  1. Home
  2. Derivatives news
  3. New York Fed releases interest rate reports
Derivatives news

New York Fed releases interest rate reports


10 October 2018 New York
Reporter: Brian Bollen

Generic business image for news article
Image: Shutterstock
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York has released three new articles focusing on macroeconomic, banking and financial market topics.

The first article, Negative Swap Spreads, looks into factors driving why US interest rate swap spreads have become negative for many maturities over the past two years.

This movement of swap spreads into negative territory has been attributed to idiosyncratic factors such as changes in foreign reserve balances and liability duration management by corporations, it said.

However, the authors assert that regulatory changes affected the willingness of supervised institutions to absorb shocks and that when exogenous factors narrowed spreads, the leverage requirements reduced incentives for market participants to enter into trades that would have counteracted the effects of exogenous shocks.

The analysis suggests that, given balance sheet costs, spreads must reach more negative levels to generate an adequate return on equity for dealers, suggesting there may be a “new normal” level at which dealers are incentivised to trade.

Trends in Credit Basis Spreads looks into the large, prolonged dislocations in credit market basis trades during the second half of 2015 and the first quarter of 2016.

The Pre-Crisis Monetary Policy Implementation Framework describes the Fed’s operating framework for monetary policy prior to the expansion of its balance sheet during the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

During this pre-crisis period, aggregate reserves were scarce; as a result, small changes in reserves would affect Fed Funds rates.

The authors find that the pre-crisis framework met the Fed’s monetary policy objectives by keeping rates close to target but had certain negative effects on financial market functioning and employed operating procedures that were rather opaque and inefficient.

The first and second articles are both authored by Nina Boyarchenko, Pooja Gupta, Nick Steele and Jacqueline Yen. Boyarchenko is a senior economist in the New York Fed’s Capital Markets Function. The third article is authored by Alexander Kroeger, John McGowan and Asani Sarkar.

Kroeger is a former senior research analyst in the New York Fed’s Research and Statistics Group; McGowan is an assistant vice president in the New York Fed’s Markets Group. Sarkar is an assistant vice president in the New York Fed’s Research and Statistics Group.
← Previous derivatives article

LCH SwapAgent completes its first swaption trade
NO FEE, NO RISK
100% ON RETURNS If you invest in only one securities finance news source this year, make sure it is your free subscription to Securities Finance Times
Advertisement
Subscribe today
Knowledge base

Explore our extensive directory to find all the essential contacts you need

Visit our directory →
Glossary terms in this article
→ Interest Rate Swap
→ Leverage

Discover definitions, explanations and related news articles in our glossary

Visit our glossary →