Conference Agenda

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 10th May 2025, 01:13:45am CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Session
AP 02: Bond habitats and term premia
Time:
Thursday, 22/Aug/2024:
9:00am - 10:30am

Session Chair: Walker Ray, London School of Economics
Location: Reduta | Large Concert Hall (floor 2)


Show help for 'Increase or decrease the abstract text size'
Presentations
ID: 1885

Identifying the Portfolio Balance Mechanism

Jefferson Duarte, Tarik Umar

Rice University, United States of America

Discussant: Alex Kontoghiorghes (Bank of England)

The Portfolio Balance Mechanism (PBM) theorizes that reducing the supply of U.S. Treasuries (USTs) increases their prices and prompts the creation of similar assets for preferred-habitat investors. The PBM is recognized as a possible mechanism to explain various important phenomena. We identify the PBM using the suspension of 30-year UST bond auctions starting in 2002. The suspension raised long-term UST prices and led to the issuance of safe, long-term collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs) created by tranching mortgage pass-throughs to satisfy habitat-preference investor demand. The heterogeneity of UST and CMOs results in an unusually clean and unambiguous identification of the PBM.

EFA2024_1885_AP 02_Identifying the Portfolio Balance Mechanism.pdf


ID: 1433

Quantitative Tightening with Slow-Moving Capital

Jialu Sun, Zhengyang Jiang

Northwestern University, United States of America

Discussant: Michele Andreolli (Boston College)

As investors adjust portfolios at different speeds, quantitative tightening shifts the composition of the marginal investors, which makes the Treasury market fragile. We show empirical evidence for the shift in investor composition, and develop a general equilibrium model of bond valuation with heterogeneous investors to understand its implications. In the model, long-term bond investors have higher risk-taking capacity, but face a portfolio adjustment cost; liquidity traders have lower risk-taking capacity, but can trade freely. Our model predicts a novel overshooting pattern: when the central bank unwinds its bond purchases, slow adjustment by long-term investors requires liq- uidity traders to absorb the imbalances, who demand a high risk premium and lower the bond price below the long-run level. As a result, quantitative tightening is not simply a symmetric reversal of quantitative easing.

EFA2024_1433_AP 02_Quantitative Tightening with Slow-Moving Capital.pdf


ID: 1533

Monetary Policy, the Yield Curve, and the Repo Market

Ruggero Jappelli1, Loriana Pelizzon2, Marti Subrahmanyam3

1Warwick Business School; 2SAFE Leibniz and Goethe University Frankfurt; 3NYU Stern

Discussant: Walker Ray (London School of Economics)

The paper develops a general equilibrium model in which bonds serve both as investment opportunities and as collateral for loans. The model integrates the yield curve with the repo market. Preferred-habitat investors and arbitrageurs generate downward-sloping demand for bonds and upward-sloping supply of collateral. The results show that quantitative easing increases the relative collateral value of targeted bonds in the repo market, (i) strengthening local supply and (ii) dampening term premium effects of asset purchases. Academics and policymakers should consider the bond and the repo markets in combination since traded assets and economic agents are the same in both markets.

EFA2024_1533_AP 02_Monetary Policy, the Yield Curve, and the Repo Market.pdf


 
Contact and Legal Notice · Contact Address:
Privacy Statement · Conference: EFA 2024
Conference Software: ConfTool Pro 2.6.153+TC
© 2001–2025 by Dr. H. Weinreich, Hamburg, Germany