Interbank liquidity and short-term yields in an emerging market economy – the experience of Hungary in 2016–2020
-
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.21511/bbs.17(4).2022.08
-
Article InfoVolume 17 2022, Issue #4, pp. 87-98
- Cited by
- 334 Views
-
64 Downloads
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Liquidity has an impact on short-term yields, which makes it a key determinant of monetary transmission. The aim of the research was to examine how the increase in the banking system’s liquidity and its distribution within the banking system affects yields. To better understand this relationship, this analysis gives an econometric estimate of the interbank liquidity demand function. The research covers Hungary being a representative of small, open, emerging market economies. The analysis is based on segmented regressions, the study covers the period 2016–2020 regarding overnight interest rates. The slope of the demand function is negative, the coefficients decrease with the increase in excess reserves. The most significant breakpoints of the demand curve are detected around 0.83% and 1.53% of M2 in excess liquidity. There is a correlation between the level of excess reserves and its distribution and concentration. The distribution of liquidity became more balanced along with the increase in excess liquidity. The saturation of the banking system depends on the concentration of liquidity among banks. The results can be useful for other small and open emerging market economies with abundant liquidity, especially in the coming tightening cycle.
- Keywords
-
JEL Classification (Paper profile tab)E41, E44, E47, E52
-
References38
-
Tables5
-
Figures4
-
- Figure 1. Theoretical derivation of the aggregate liquidity demand
- Figure 2. Relative price of liquidity subject to net excess liquidity
- Figure 3. The segmented liquidity demand function of the Hungarian banking system
- Figure 4. Evolution of the relative price of liquidity subject to the concentration of excess reserves
-
- Table 1. Descriptive statistics of excess liquidity and its relative price
- Table 2. Sequential segmentation of net aggregate demand for liquidity in Hungary
- Table 3. Segmented regression output of relative price subject to net excess liquidity
- Table 4. Comparable statistics of the Hungarian aggregate liquidity demand curve
- Table 5. Comparative data of the Hungarian and the US banking system and market for liquidity
-
- Afonso, G., Armenter, R., & Lester, B. (2019). A Model of the Federal Funds Market: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow. Review of Economic Dynamics, 33, 177-204.
- Bagehot, W. (1873). Lombard street: a description of the money market. London.
- Bai, J. & Perron, P. (2003). Computation and analysis of multiple structural change models. Journal of Applied Economerics, 18(1), 1-22.
- Bai, J. (1997). Estimating Multiple Breaks One at a Time. Econometric Theory, 13(3), 315-352.
- Baldo, L., Hallinger, B., Helmus, C., Herrala, N., Martins, D., Mohing, F., Petroulakis, F., Resinek, M., Vergote, O., Usciati, B., & Wang, Y. (2017). The distribution of excess liquidity in the euro area (Occasional Paper Series No. 200). European Central Bank.
- Bech, M., & Klee, E. (2009). The Mechanics of a Graceful Exit: Interest on Reserves and Segmentation in the Federal Funds Market (Staff Report No. 416). Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
- Bethlendi, A., & Mero, K. (2020). Changes in the structure of financial intermediation – Eastern-Central European developments in the light of global and European trends. Danube: Law And Economics Review, 11(4), 283-299.
- Bindseil, U., Nyborg, K. G., & Strebulaev, I. A. (2009). Repo Auctions and the Market for Liquidity. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 41(7), 1391-1421.
- Blanchard, O. (2012). Monetary Policy In The Wake of The Crisis. In Blanchard et al. (Eds), In the wake of the crisis. Leading Economists Reassess Economic Policy. The MIT Press. International Monetary Fund.
- Blanchard, O., & Summers, L. H. (2019). Development or revolution? - Re-thinking macroeconomic policy following the Big Recession. Budapest: Pallas Athéné Könyvkiadó Kft.
- Borio, C., & Drehmann, M. (2009). Towards an operational framework for financial stability: “fuzzy” measurement and its consequences (BIS Working Papers No. 284).
- Castiglionesi, F., & Eboli, M. (2018). Liquidity Flows in Interbank Networks. Review of Finance, 22(4), 1291-1334.
- Chang, S., Contessi, S., & Francis, J. L. (2014). Understanding the accumulation of bank and thrift reserves during the U.S. financial crisis. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 43(C), 78-106.
- Coeuré, B. (2019). A tale of two money markets: fragmentation or concentration. ECB workshop on money markets, monetary policy implementation and central bank balance sheets. Frankfurt am Main.
- Craig, B., Fecht, F., & Tümer-Alkan, G (2015). The role of interbank relationships and liquidity needs. Journal of Banking & Finance, 53, 99-111.
- Csávás, C., & Kollarik, A. (2016). Impact of the Self-Financing Programme on monetary conditions. In The first two years of the Self-Financing Programme. Study volume (pp. 94-121). Magyar Nemzeti Bank.
- Denbee, E., Julliard, C., Li, Y., & Yuan, K. (2021). Network risk and key players: A structural analysis of interbank liquidity. Journal of Financial Economics, 141(3), 831-859.
- Ennis, H., & Wolman, A. (2015). Large Excess Reserves in the United States: A View from the Cross-Section of Banks. International Journal of Central Banking, 251-281.
- Erhart, S. (2004). Driving factors behind O/N interbank interest rates – the Hungarian experiences (MNB Occasional Papers No. 34). Magyar Nemzeti Bank.
- Fecht, F., Nyborg, K.G., & Rocholl, J. (2010). The Price of Liquidity: Bank Characteristics and Market Conditions (Working Paper No. 50). Swiss Finance Institute.
- Freixas, X., Martin, A., & Skeie, D. (2011). Bank Liquidity, Interbank Markets, and Monetary Policy. The Review of Financial Studies, 24(8), 2656-2692.
- Friedman, J. H. (1991). Multivariate Adaptive Regression Splines. The Annals of Statistics, 19(1), 1-67.
- Goodhart, C. (2008). Liquidity risk management. Financial Stability Review,11, 30-45.
- Hoerova, M., Mendicino, C., Nikolov, K., Schepens, G., & Van den Heuvel, S. (2018). Benefits and costs of liquidity regulation (Discussion Papers No 2169). European Central Bank.
- Jónsdottir, R. (2019). The Central Bank of Iceland’s Liquidity Management System (Working Papers No. 79). Central Bank of Iceland.
- Kolozsi, P. P., & Horváth, G. (2019). Mennyit ér a likviditás? [How much liquidity is worth?]. Közgazdasági Szemle, 67, 113-139.
- Lehmann, K., Palotai, D., & Virág, B. (Ed.). (2017). The Hungarian way - targeted central bank policy. Magyar Nemzeti Bank, Budapest.
- Lentner, C., & Kolozsi, P. P. (2019). Innovative ways of thinking concerning economic governance after the global financial crisis. Problems and Perspectives in Management, 17(3), 122-131.
- Matolcsy, G. (2015). Balance and growth: Consolidation and stabilisation in Hungary, 2010–2014. Kairosz kiadó.
- Matolcsy, G., & Palotai, D. (2016). The interaction of fiscal and monetary policy in Hungary over the past one and a half decades. Financial and Economic Review, 15(2), 5-32.
- Mcleay, M., Radia, A., & Thomas, R. (2014). Money creation in the modern economy. Bank of England, Quarterly Bulletin, 54(1), 14-27.
- Muggeo, V. (2003). Estimating Regression Models with Unknown Break-Points. Statistics in Medicine, 22(19), 3055-3071.
- Nikolau, K. (2009). Liquidity (risk) concepts. Definitions and interactions (Working Paper Series No. 1008). European Central Bank.
- Nyborg, K.G., & Strebulaev, I. A. (2004). Multiple Unit Auctions and Short Squeezes. Review of Financial Studies, 17(2), 545-580.
- Ouyang, Z., Dou, Z., Wei, L., & Vasa, L. (2022). Nonlinear spillover effect of US monetary policy uncertainty on China’s systematic financial risks. Journal of Business Economics and Management, 23(2), 364-381.
- Reis, R. (2016). Funding Quantitative Easing to Target Inflation (Discussion Papers No. 1626). Centre for Macroeconomics (CFM).
- Romero, O. V. (2015). Friedman, Monetarism and Quantitative Easing. Theoretical and Practical Research in the Economic Fields, 7(1), 11-29.
- Rule, G. (2015). Understanding the central bank balance sheet. Bank of England.