Title: Supply and Demand Models of Financial Markets
1Supply and Demand Models of Financial Markets
2Two Markets
- Loanable Funds Market
- Determines Interest Rate in Capital Markets
- Liquidity Market
- Determines Money Market Rate
3Loanable Funds Market
- Consider the financial market at its broadest and
most abstract. - an amalgamation of the bond market and the
lending market (banks, etc.) - Map the relationship between the interest rate
and the quantity of funds that are lent. - Supply curve represents the behavior of savers
lenders - Demand curve represents the behavior of borrowers
- Could represent the global financial market or a
large national market.
4Supply Curve Loanable Funds
- Why does the supply curve slope up?
- When real interest rates offered by banks are
high, savers are rewarded with more future
consumption and are likely to be induced to save
more. - Caveat If some savers are setting a target for
their level of wealth at retirement, a higher
interest rate reduces the amount they need to
save. - For this reason, many economists believe saving
curve is very inelastic.
5Demand Curve Loanable Funds
- Why does the demand curve slope down?
- Firms borrow to finance investment projects. If
the return on investment falls below the interest
rate, the project is not worthwhile. The higher
the interest rate, the fewer projects fall below
the hurdle. - Households borrow to finance housing. The higher
are interest rates, the smaller is the house that
the householders can buy with a mortgage payment
that they can afford.
6Competitive Market EquilibriumLoanable Funds
Market(Geometry)
S
r
D
r
LF
LF
7Example Investment Boom in Japan as economy
recovers
S
r
I
I
r
r
LF
LF
LF
8Savings
- We divide savings into 2 parts
SGovernment Public Saving/Government Saving (Budget Surplus)
SPrivate Private Saving (Household Business Saving)
S National Saving
9Example US Government runs a deficit to finance
military spending
S
r
S
I
r
r
LF
LF
LF
10Example US Consumers become thriftier
S
r
I
r
LF
LF
11Global Economy
- Additional Source of Savings
- Loanable Funds Supply Public Savings
- Net Capital Inflow from Abroad
- Two Effects
- Supply Curve Becomes More Elastic
- More globalized, more elastic
- Global Financial Markets also a source of shifts
in Supply Curve
12Questions
- Compare Investment Boom in a very globalized
economy with one in a less globalized economy.
What happens to investment interest rates?
13 Money Markets
14Liquid Assets
- Two kinds of assets
- Liquid Assets (Currency, Checking Accounts,
Savings Accounts) that are useful for
transactions which pay zero or below market
interest rates. - Money market assets (Government bills, commercial
paper, jumbo CDs) that pay a market rate, i, but
which cannot be used for transactions
15Liquidity Demand
- Q Why does the money demand curve slope down?
- A The greater is the market interest rate, the
greater is the opportunity cost of holding money.
- Q What shifts the money demand curve?
- A An increase in GDP will increase the need for
money for transactions shifting the demand curve
out. A reduction in GDP will shift the demand
curve in.
16Money Supply
- Supply of monetary assets governed by central
bank. - Prints currency
- Makes reserves available to banks
- Governs fraction of deposits that banks must keep.
17Money Market
Money Supply
Money Demand
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18Equilibrium in the Money Market
- If interest rates are too high, excess supply of
money - people will want to buy interest paying assets
like bank accounts or treasury bills. - Bond dealers and banks can reduce the interest
rates they are willing to offer - If interest rates are too low, excess demand for
money - people will want to sell interest paying assets
like bank accounts or treasury bills to get more
liquidity. - Bond dealers and banks must raise interest rates.
19Changes in Money Market Rates During Business
Cycles
- Money Demand Shocks What happens to interest
rates when GDP (either prices or real GDP rises)? - What happens when GDP falls?
20Operating Targets Target Interest Rates
- Most big country CBs target interbank interest
rates, the rate at which banks lend reserves to
one another (in HK, this is called what?)
Fed Federal Funds Rate
BoJ Uncollateralized Call Money Rate
ECB Main Refinancing Rate
BoK Overnight Call Rate
UK Official Bank Rate
21Target Rates Affect Money Market Rates
CEIC Database
22Money Supply
- Government can control the money supply and can
shift the curve in or out by decreasing or
increasing money supply. - What does the central bank need to do to money
supply to increase the interest rate?
23Money Market at ZIRP
Money Demand
Money Supply
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i
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3
0
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24Learning Outcomes
- Students should be able to
- Use the Loanable Funds model to analyze the
effects of external events on savings,
investment, and real interest rates in capital
markets and - Compare capital markets in globalized economies
with those in closed economies. - Use the money supply and demand model of money
markets to examine the effect of changes in the
economy on money market rates and - Characterize the effects of changes in monetary
policy