top

  Info

  • Utilizzare la checkbox di selezione a fianco di ciascun documento per attivare le funzionalità di stampa, invio email, download nei formati disponibili del (i) record.

  Info

  • Utilizzare questo link per rimuovere la selezione effettuata.
Unconventional monetary policy and the federal reserve / / Payton E. Dawson and Dennis A. West, editors
Unconventional monetary policy and the federal reserve / / Payton E. Dawson and Dennis A. West, editors
Pubbl/distr/stampa New York : , : Nova publishers, , [2013]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (165 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 332.110973
Collana Monetary, fiscal and trade policies
Soggetto topico Monetary policy - United States
ISBN 1-62618-638-3
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910151733003321
New York : , : Nova publishers, , [2013]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Unwinding quantitative easing : how the Fed should promote stable prices, economic growth, and job creation : hearing before the Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States, One Hundred Thirteenth Congress, second session, March 26, 2014
Unwinding quantitative easing : how the Fed should promote stable prices, economic growth, and job creation : hearing before the Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States, One Hundred Thirteenth Congress, second session, March 26, 2014
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington : , : U.S. Government Printing Office, , 2014
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (iii, 52 pages)
Collana S. hrg.
Soggetto topico Quantitative easing (Monetary policy) - United States
Interest rates - Government policy - United States
Monetary policy - United States
Soggetto genere / forma Legislative hearings.
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Altri titoli varianti Unwinding quantitative easing
Record Nr. UNINA-9910702423903321
Washington : , : U.S. Government Printing Office, , 2014
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The US financial system and its crises : from the 1907 panic to the 2007 crash / / Giorgio Pizzutto
The US financial system and its crises : from the 1907 panic to the 2007 crash / / Giorgio Pizzutto
Autore Pizzutto Giorgio
Edizione [1st ed. 2019.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa New York, New York : , : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, , [2019]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (x, 219 pages) : illustrations (chiefly color), charts
Disciplina 332.0973
Collana Palgrave Studies in Economic History
Soggetto topico Banks and banking - United States
Monetary policy - United States
Finance - United States
Financial crises - United States
Macroeconomics
ISBN 3-030-14489-5
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: The US financial system from the National Banking Act to the crisis of 2007 -- Chapter 3: The birth of the Federal reserve and its monetary policy -- Chapter 4: Non bank financial intermediaries and the crisis of 1929 -- Chapter 5: The Great Depression -- Chapter 6: The money market after the second world war: securitization and the role of dealers -- Chapter 7: Monetary policy, spread compression and the house market -- Chapter 8: The money market, the collateral market and the crisis of 2007-08 -- Chapter 9 Conclusions.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910337672203321
Pizzutto Giorgio  
New York, New York : , : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, , [2019]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Wall Street revalued [[electronic resource] ] : imperfect markets and inept central bankers / / Andrew Smithers
Wall Street revalued [[electronic resource] ] : imperfect markets and inept central bankers / / Andrew Smithers
Autore Smithers Andrew
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, West Sussex ; ; Hoboken, NJ, : John Wiley & Sons, 2009
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (289 p.)
Disciplina 332
332.04150973
Soggetto topico Capital market - United States
Monetary policy - United States
Finance - United States
Banks and banking, Central - United States
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 0-470-68510-7
1-119-20701-0
1-282-29160-2
9786612291609
0-470-68269-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto WALL STREET REVALUED: Imperfect Markets and Inept Central Bankers; Contents; Foreword; 1: Introduction; 2: Synopsis; 3: Interest Rate Levels and the Stock Market; 4: Interest Rate Changes and Share Price Changes; 5: Household Savings and the Stock Market; 6: A Moderately Rather than a Perfectly Efficient Market; 7: The Efficient Market Hypothesis; 8: Testing the Imperfectly Efficient Market Hypothesis; 9: Other Claims for Valuing Equities; 10: Forecasting Returns without Using Value; 11: Valuing Stock Markets by Hindsight Combined with Subsequent Returns; 12: House Prices
13: The Price of Liquidity - The Return for Holding Illiquid Assets14: The Return on Equities and the Return on Equity Portfolios; 15: The General Undesirability of Leveraging Equity Portfolios; 16: A Rare Exception to the Rule Against Leverage; 17: Profits are Overstated; 18: Intangibles; 19: Accounting Issues; 20: The Impact on q; 21: Problems with Valuing the Markets of Developing Economies; 22: Central Banks' Response to Asset Prices; 23: The Response to Asset Prices from Investors, Fund Managers and Pension Consultants; 24: International Imbalances; 25: Summing Up
Appendix 1: Sources and ObligationsAppendix 2: Glossary of Terms; Appendix 3: Interest Rates, Profits and Share Prices; Appendix 4: Examples of the Current (Trailing) and Next Year's (Prospective) PEs Giving Misleading Guides to Value; Appendix 5: Real Returns from 17 International Equity Markets Comparing 1899-1954 with 1954-2008 and Showing Their Variance Compression; Appendix 6: Errors in Inflation Expectations and the Impact on Bond Returns; Appendix 7: An Algebraic Demonstration that Negative Serial Correlation can make the Leverage of an Equity Portfolio Unattractive
Appendix 8: Correlations between International Stock MarketsBibliography; Index; colour plates
Record Nr. UNINA-9910139932003321
Smithers Andrew  
Chichester, West Sussex ; ; Hoboken, NJ, : John Wiley & Sons, 2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Wall Street revalued [[electronic resource] ] : imperfect markets and inept central bankers / / Andrew Smithers
Wall Street revalued [[electronic resource] ] : imperfect markets and inept central bankers / / Andrew Smithers
Autore Smithers Andrew
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, West Sussex ; ; Hoboken, NJ, : John Wiley & Sons, 2009
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (289 p.)
Disciplina 332
332.04150973
Soggetto topico Capital market - United States
Monetary policy - United States
Finance - United States
Banks and banking, Central - United States
ISBN 0-470-68510-7
1-119-20701-0
1-282-29160-2
9786612291609
0-470-68269-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto WALL STREET REVALUED: Imperfect Markets and Inept Central Bankers; Contents; Foreword; 1: Introduction; 2: Synopsis; 3: Interest Rate Levels and the Stock Market; 4: Interest Rate Changes and Share Price Changes; 5: Household Savings and the Stock Market; 6: A Moderately Rather than a Perfectly Efficient Market; 7: The Efficient Market Hypothesis; 8: Testing the Imperfectly Efficient Market Hypothesis; 9: Other Claims for Valuing Equities; 10: Forecasting Returns without Using Value; 11: Valuing Stock Markets by Hindsight Combined with Subsequent Returns; 12: House Prices
13: The Price of Liquidity - The Return for Holding Illiquid Assets14: The Return on Equities and the Return on Equity Portfolios; 15: The General Undesirability of Leveraging Equity Portfolios; 16: A Rare Exception to the Rule Against Leverage; 17: Profits are Overstated; 18: Intangibles; 19: Accounting Issues; 20: The Impact on q; 21: Problems with Valuing the Markets of Developing Economies; 22: Central Banks' Response to Asset Prices; 23: The Response to Asset Prices from Investors, Fund Managers and Pension Consultants; 24: International Imbalances; 25: Summing Up
Appendix 1: Sources and ObligationsAppendix 2: Glossary of Terms; Appendix 3: Interest Rates, Profits and Share Prices; Appendix 4: Examples of the Current (Trailing) and Next Year's (Prospective) PEs Giving Misleading Guides to Value; Appendix 5: Real Returns from 17 International Equity Markets Comparing 1899-1954 with 1954-2008 and Showing Their Variance Compression; Appendix 6: Errors in Inflation Expectations and the Impact on Bond Returns; Appendix 7: An Algebraic Demonstration that Negative Serial Correlation can make the Leverage of an Equity Portfolio Unattractive
Appendix 8: Correlations between International Stock MarketsBibliography; Index; colour plates
Record Nr. UNINA-9910830931703321
Smithers Andrew  
Chichester, West Sussex ; ; Hoboken, NJ, : John Wiley & Sons, 2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Wall Street revalued [[electronic resource] ] : imperfect markets and inept central bankers / / Andrew Smithers
Wall Street revalued [[electronic resource] ] : imperfect markets and inept central bankers / / Andrew Smithers
Autore Smithers Andrew
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, West Sussex ; ; Hoboken, NJ, : John Wiley & Sons, 2009
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (289 p.)
Disciplina 332
332.04150973
Soggetto topico Capital market - United States
Monetary policy - United States
Finance - United States
Banks and banking, Central - United States
ISBN 0-470-68510-7
1-119-20701-0
1-282-29160-2
9786612291609
0-470-68269-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto WALL STREET REVALUED: Imperfect Markets and Inept Central Bankers; Contents; Foreword; 1: Introduction; 2: Synopsis; 3: Interest Rate Levels and the Stock Market; 4: Interest Rate Changes and Share Price Changes; 5: Household Savings and the Stock Market; 6: A Moderately Rather than a Perfectly Efficient Market; 7: The Efficient Market Hypothesis; 8: Testing the Imperfectly Efficient Market Hypothesis; 9: Other Claims for Valuing Equities; 10: Forecasting Returns without Using Value; 11: Valuing Stock Markets by Hindsight Combined with Subsequent Returns; 12: House Prices
13: The Price of Liquidity - The Return for Holding Illiquid Assets14: The Return on Equities and the Return on Equity Portfolios; 15: The General Undesirability of Leveraging Equity Portfolios; 16: A Rare Exception to the Rule Against Leverage; 17: Profits are Overstated; 18: Intangibles; 19: Accounting Issues; 20: The Impact on q; 21: Problems with Valuing the Markets of Developing Economies; 22: Central Banks' Response to Asset Prices; 23: The Response to Asset Prices from Investors, Fund Managers and Pension Consultants; 24: International Imbalances; 25: Summing Up
Appendix 1: Sources and ObligationsAppendix 2: Glossary of Terms; Appendix 3: Interest Rates, Profits and Share Prices; Appendix 4: Examples of the Current (Trailing) and Next Year's (Prospective) PEs Giving Misleading Guides to Value; Appendix 5: Real Returns from 17 International Equity Markets Comparing 1899-1954 with 1954-2008 and Showing Their Variance Compression; Appendix 6: Errors in Inflation Expectations and the Impact on Bond Returns; Appendix 7: An Algebraic Demonstration that Negative Serial Correlation can make the Leverage of an Equity Portfolio Unattractive
Appendix 8: Correlations between International Stock MarketsBibliography; Index; colour plates
Record Nr. UNINA-9910841139303321
Smithers Andrew  
Chichester, West Sussex ; ; Hoboken, NJ, : John Wiley & Sons, 2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Why add an interest rate hike on our struggling small manufacturers : hearing before the Committee on Small Business, House of Representatives, One Hundred Seventh Congress, second session, Washington, DC, April 24, 2002
Why add an interest rate hike on our struggling small manufacturers : hearing before the Committee on Small Business, House of Representatives, One Hundred Seventh Congress, second session, Washington, DC, April 24, 2002
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington : , : U.S. Government Printing Office, , 2002
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (iii, 110 pages) : illustrations
Soggetto topico Interest rates - United States
Monetary policy - United States
Small business - United States - Finance
Soggetto genere / forma Legislative hearings.
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Altri titoli varianti Why add an interest rate hike on our struggling small Manufacturers
Record Nr. UNINA-9910708367803321
Washington : , : U.S. Government Printing Office, , 2002
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Why fiscal stimulus programs fail . Volume 1 The limits of accomodative monetary policy in practice / / John J. Heim
Why fiscal stimulus programs fail . Volume 1 The limits of accomodative monetary policy in practice / / John J. Heim
Autore Heim John J.
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2021]
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (584 pages) : illustrations
Disciplina 336.390973
Soggetto topico Monetary policy - United States
Fiscal policy - United States
ISBN 3-030-65675-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Part I Introductory Chapters -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The Crowd Out Problem and Accommodative Monetary Policy -- 1.2 Individual Chapter Contents and Findings -- 1.3 Summary of Key Findings -- References -- 2 Literature Review -- 2.1 Summary of Findings -- 2.1.1 Stocks and Bonds -- 2.1.2 GDP -- 2.1.3 Inequality -- 2.2 Detailed Findings -- 2.2.1 Assessment of Monetary Policy Effectiveness in the Business Press -- Stock Market Effects -- Bond Market Effects -- GDP Effects -- Inequality Effects -- 2.2.2 Assessment of Monetary Policy Effectiveness in the Academic/Professional Literature -- Stock Market Effects -- Bond Market Effects -- Interest Rate Effects -- GDP Effects -- Effects on Inequality -- 2.2.3 Comparisons of Findings of the Professional and Business Press -- 2.3 A Comparison of Cowles, DSGE, and VAR Methodologies Used in Literature Review -- References -- 3 Methodology -- 3.1 General Methodological Issues -- 3.1.1 The Importance of Replicating Results Before Publication -- 3.2 Other Methodological Issues Specific to This Study -- 3.2.1 GDP Deflator Methodological Adjustments -- 3.2.2 Reconciling Differences in Signs, Significance Levels of Tests in Different Time Periods -- 3.2.3 Mixing Periods of Budget Deficit (Crowd Out) Increase and Decrease -- 3.2.4 Statistical Insignificance Caused by Lack of Variation in the Data -- 3.2.5 Left-Out Variables -- 3.2.6 Multicollinearity -- 3.2.7 Insufficient Sample Size -- 3.2.8 Spurious Results Indicating Insignificance -- 3.3 How Should a Change in Loanable Funds Be Distributed to Tax and Spending Deficits -- References -- Part II Theory of Crowd Out and Accommodative Monetary Policy -- 4 Theory of Crowd Out and Accommodative Monetary Policy.
4.1 How, and Under What Conditions, Can Federal Reserve Purchases of Government Securities Stimulate the Economy -- 4.1.1 Overview -- 4.1.2 Detailed Analysis of the Crowd Out and Accommodative Monetary Policy Processes -- Accommodative Federal Reserve Purchases from Depository Institutions -- Federal Reserve Purchases from Non-depository Institutions -- 4.2 A Formal Model of the Effects of Fiscal Stimulus Programs, Their Crowd Out Effects, and Accommodative Monetary Policy -- 4.2.1 Crowd Out Effects of Deficit Financing -- 4.2.2 How Accommodating Monetary Policy Offsets Crowd Out Effects -- 4.2.3 Different Crowd Out Effects of Tax Cut and Spending Deficits -- Alternative Ways of Modeling Crowd Out Effects -- 4.2.4 Declining Deficits Create "Crowd in" Effects -- 4.2.5 Should We Use Accommodate Monetary Policy to Offset Crowd Out? -- References -- 5 A Simplified Balance Sheet View of How Open Market Operations to Stimulate the Economy, When Dominated by Primary Dealers, Actually Stimulate Securities Markets, not the Real Economy -- 5.1 When the FR Goes into the Open Market and Buys 1000 in Treasuries (T) from a Dealer/Broker (Usually a "Primary Dealer"), The Dealer May Be Paid by Check Drawn on the FR (FRck) (If Dealer Is Paid Electronically by Fed Transfer of Funds to Dealer's Bank, Skip Steps 5.1-3 and Go to Step #5.4) -- 5.2 Dealer #1Deposits FR Check in Dealer's Own Bank -- 5.3 Bond Dealer's Bank Cashes in the FRck at the Fed. Assume Required Reserve Ratio (RR) = 10% and Let Excess Reserves = (ER).
5.4 Bond Dealers Make Their Money Buying and Selling Bonds. Bond Dealers (Generally) Would Have no Incentive to Sell Treasuries to the FR, Except to Obtain the Funds Needed to Buy Another Security (Alt Sec) Expected to Pay a Higher Return. This Is Bought from Dealer #2 by Dealer #1 and Paid for with DD (Step Involving Check Payment, and Conversion to Reserves not Shown) -- 5.5 Bond Dealer #2 (Generally) Only Sold Alt Sec to the First Dealer Because Dealer #2 Needed the Liquidity to Buy Another Security (Alt Sec2) that Looked More Promising, Which Dealer #2 then Bought from Bond Dealer #3 Using the Proceeds of the Sale of Alt Sec to Dealer #1 to Finance the Purchase of Alt Sec2. the Cycle Continues in Perpetuity Until no Other Dealers Wish to Sell Securities at This Time. Results for Dealers #2 and #3 and #4 Are Shown Below (with Some Check & -- Reserves Movement Inte -- 5.6 The Final Result Is Shown Below, After All Intermediate Steps Above Are Cancelled Out, and Assuming Bond Dealer #4 Cannot or Does not Want to Find Any Other Dealer/Broker with Desirable Securities to Buy -- References -- 6 A Money Multiplier Approach to How Open Market Operations Stimulate Securities Markets and the Real Economy -- 6.1 Simple Money Multiplier -- 6.2 A More Sophisticated Money Multiplier -- References -- Part III The Effectiveness of Accommodating Monetary Policy Mechanics -- 7 The Role of Primary Dealers in Federal Reserve Efforts to Change the Money Supply -- 7.1 Primary Dealers Dominate Auctions -- 7.2 What Type of Bank Does the Federal Reserve Purchase Securities from: Investment or Depository? -- 7.3 The Failure of Federal Reserve Securities Purchases During "QE" to Reduce Depository Institutions Holdings of Government Securities, Which Would Have Increased Their Loanable Funds -- 7.4 Primary Dealers and the Business They Are in: Selected Years 1960-2014.
7.5 Loss of Efficiency When Using Investment Banks and Brokerages to Implement Accommodative Monetary Policy -- 7.6 Primary Dealers Who Are Domestic Vs. Foreign Corporations -- References -- 8 The Failure of Accommodative Monetary Policy Before Quantitative Easing (QE) and Its Success After -- the "Pushing on a String Problem" -- 8.1 Effectiveness of Accommodative Monetary Policy 1960-2007 -- 8.2 Effectiveness of Accommodative Monetary Policy 2008-Present -- 8.3 Does "Pushing on a String" During QE Apply to M1 as Well as Total Loanable Funds? -- 8.4 Conclusions -- References -- 9 The Failure of U.S. Loanable Funds to Grow as Much as Federal Reserve Securities Purchases During QE: The Role of Foreign Banks -- 9.1 The Textbook Equivalence of Increases in FR Securities Purchases and Increases in Loanable Reserves -- 9.2 The Effects of Fed Purchases of Securities from Foreign Dealer/Brokers -- 9.3 Trends Since 1960 in M1, Excess Reserves and Currency in Circulation -- References -- Part IV Increases in M1-Effects on Stock and Bond Markets and the GDP -- 10 Effect of FR Purchases of Government Securities on M1 -- 10.1 Relationship of M1 Growth to Growth in Securities Purchased by the Fed -- 10.2 More Sophisticated Models of the Relationship Between FR Securities Purchases and M1 -- 10.3 Tests of the Relationship Between M1 and Excess Reserves and FR Securities Purchases -- 10.4 Relationship of Growth in M1 to Growth in the Monetary Base -- 10.5 The Most Theory Consistent Model of M1's Determinants -- 10.6 Summary of Results of Tests of Relationship of Changes in FR Purchases to Changes in M1 -- References -- 11 Effect of Increases in Loanable Funds or M1 on the GDP -- 11.1 Simple Tests -- 11.2 More Sophisticated Tests of the Effects of FR Security Purchases on Real GDP -- 11.2.1 Summary of Table 11.1 Findings.
11.3 Testing Housing and Consumer Services Demand for Sensitivity to FR Securities Purchases -- 11.3.1 Housing Investment Effects -- 11.3.2 Lagged Consumer Services Spending Effects -- 11.3.3 Total Consumer and Investment Spending Effects -- 11.3.4 Full GDP Effects -- 11.4 Summary of Results and Conclusions -- References -- 12 Effect of FR Security Purchases and M1 on Stock, Bond, and Mortgage Markets -- 12.1 Effect of FR Open Market Operations on the Stock Market -- 12.2 Effect of FR Open Market Operations on Bond and Mortgage Markets -- 12.3 Do FR Open Market Operations also Affect GDP -- 12.4 Summary of Findings and Conclusions -- References -- Part V Does Crowd Out Really Occur? -- 13 Does Crowd Out Really Occur? Initial Empirical Evidence: One Time Period -- 13.1 Consumption -- 13.2 Investment -- 13.3 Conclusion -- References -- 14 Does Crowd Out Really Occur? Empirical Evidence: Replication in Many Time Periods -- 14.1 The Heim (2017b) Study -- 14.2 The Heim (2017a) Study -- 14.3 Crowd Out Findings in This Study -- References -- Part VI Increases in Total Loanable Funds (S+FB)-Do They Reduce Crowd Out? -- 15 Initial Tests of Whether Crowd Out Can Be Offset by Increases in Loanable Funds -- 15.1 Methodology for Testing Increases in Loanable Funds as an Offset to Consumption Crowd Out -- 15.2 Taxes: Another Variable That Has Both Positive and Negative Effects on Consumption -- 15.3 Methodology for Testing Increases in Loanable Funds as an Offset to Investment Crowd Out -- 15.4 Conclusions -- References -- 16 Which Models Best Explain How Changes in Loanable Funds Offset Crowd Out? -- 16.1 Effects on the Consumption Function -- 16.2 Effects on the Investment Function -- References -- 17 Do Loanable Funds Modify the Crowd Out Effects of the One-Variable Deficit (T - G)? -- 17.1 Consumption Results When also Including (S + FB) as a Separate Variable.
17.2 Consumption Results When not Including (S + FB) as a Separate Variable.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910483134503321
Heim John J.  
Cham, Switzerland : , : Springer, , [2021]
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui

Data di pubblicazione

Altro...