Monday, April 27, 2009

So what would a tool to manage the supply of credit look like?

TO BE NOTED: From Alphaville:

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QE in pics

We are long-standing fans of the Bank of England’s graphics department, so we should welcome the first of a new quarterly publication: the Asset Purchase Facility, Q1 2009. Thankfully, the illustrations are up to the usual high standard, but there’s not a great deal to report.

Yes, the Bank’s purchase programme was ramped up progressively through March…

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But the effect on gilt yields has been muted..

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Aside from this adjustment to the curve - higher at the long-end and flatter at the short-end.

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More central bank eye-candy here.

Separately, we should note the suggestion of HSBC chairman Stephen Green on Monday: if the Bank of England gets bored with quantitative easing, it can always busy itself with direct credit controls:

So what would a tool to manage the supply of credit look like? The best approach would be for the authorities to adopt a counter-cyclical capital ratio policy for banks. This would help to balance the real economy, and to ensure stability in the financial system…

Calibrating this approach would require careful and subtle policy management. It would be unlikely to be as simple as a lock-step approach in which the bank capital ratios were adjusted mechanistically in synchronisation with interest rates…

But if we do not address this problem, we will again face the challenge of an unbalanced real economy and overheated financial system eventually. Conversely, if we can get this right, the prospect is for a better balanced, more competitive UK economy, with a more sustainable growth trajectory.

Related links:
Do we need a credit policy
? - John Kemp at Reuters

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