Money Market¶

by Professor Throckmorton
for Intermediate Macro
W&M ECON 304
Slides

Introduction¶

  • In the goods market, everything is real, and we would have to imagine that the output of firms is being bartered among households, i.e., there was no money.
  • Of course, money is essential to how a macroeconomy works, serving the essential purposes of a store of value, medium of exchange, and unit of account.
  • People need money to buy the goods, services, and assets that make up their consumption and savings.
  • However, money is not the best store of value since it does not earn interest.
  • Thus, we should think of households as portfolio managers that choose between assets with different uses.

Money and Bonds

  • It's useful to compare assets across these dimensions:
    1. Return
    2. Liquidity
    3. Risk
  • Money has no return, but bonds do.
  • Money is used for transactions, i.e., it is liquid. Some bonds with large volume markets issued by governments or corporations with excellent credit ratings are nearly as liquid, since buyers are abundant.
  • And bonds vary by risk depending on who issued them, whether they have good or bad credit ratings.
  • Let's consider money vs. a bond with similar risk and liquidity, i.e., both originate from the U.S. government, where the only difference is their rate of return.

Portfolio Choice¶

  • Suppose households, or portfolio managers, allocate their financial portfolios between money and bonds.
  • The only difference is that bonds earn positive interest.
  • Q: How much of the portfolio should be allocated to bonds?
  • A: It depends on the interest rate. A higher interest rate makes bonds more appealing than a lower rate.

U.S. T-Bills

  • If the bonds are 3-month U.S. Treasury Bills (i.e., T-Bills), then they look a lot like a simple loan.
  • Consider a simple loan where the principal is $\$20$ and the interest rate is $10\%$.
  • The borrower must pay back principal + interest or $= \$20 + 0.1\times \$20 = \$22$ back to the lender.
  • When the U.S. Treasury (the borrower) issues T-Bills, they set the face value on the bond, which is paid to the bond holder (the lender) 3 months after the purchase.
  • When the U.S. Treasury auctions T-Bills, the price at which the market buys them essentially becomes the principal, i.e., how much the borrower initially receives.

Bond Pricing¶

  • Denote the bond's face value as $FV$, the bond price at auction as $P_B$, and the interest rate as $i$, then

    $$ P_B (1 + i) = FV $$

    which has the same structure as a simple loan, principal $\times(1+i) = $ loan payment.

  • This can be rearranged as

    $$ P_B = \frac{FV}{1 + i} $$

    which says the price of a bond today is equal to present value future cash flow, which in this case is the bond's face value.

  • Prediction: if higher demand for bonds drives the bond price up, then the interest rate (or yield) falls. I.e., a bond's price is inversely related to its yield.

Money Demand¶

  • Money is useful for transactions, i.e., it's liquid, and bonds are useful because they earn a positive return.
  • The opportunity cost of holding money then is the interest forgone from not holding bonds.
  • Thus, people should hold more money when the interest rate is low and more bonds when the interest rates are high.
  • The quantity of money demanded with respect to the interest rate satisfies the law of demand.
  • Money demand also depends on income. Higher household income would lead to more money demand (i.e., money is a normal good).
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Money Supply¶

  • Money originates from a central bank.
  • Central bank asset purchases create high-powered money, e.g., reserves at member banks of the Federal Reserve System.
  • Banks use those reserves to make loans, which creates deposits that are part of the money supply.
  • In other words, one part of money creation is public due to central bank transactions, and the other part of money creation is private due to the lending behavior of banks.
  • The Fed influences the money supply with open market operations
    1. If the Fed buys bonds, then money is created (i.e., expansionary monetary policy).
    2. If the Fed sells bonds, then money is destroyed (i.e., contractionary monetary policy).
  • Since modern central banking targets interest rates, we will assume that money supply is perfectly inelastic and the money supply is whatever it needs to be to achieve the desired interest rate.
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Equilibrium¶

  • Suppose the current interest rate is below equilibrium.
  • At that interest rate, there is a shortage of money.
  • Portfolio managers sell bonds to increase money in their portfolios.
  • As people sell bonds, the bond price falls and the interest rate (yield) rises.
  • As the interest rate rises, people are willing to hold less money.
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Monetary Policy¶

  • In modern central banking (since the 1990s), $M^s$ is whatever it needs to be to achieve a target interest rate in the short-run.
  • e.g., the Fed achieves their target interest rate with open market operations.
  • In the money market model, if money demand were to increase or decrease then the central bank should simultaneously change money supply to maintain their interest rate target.
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  1. Suppose the central bank targets $i=i^*$ and the money market is in an initial equilibrium.
  2. (For some reason) $Y\uparrow$ from $Y_1$ to $Y_2$.
    • Money demand shifts right because it increases with income.
    • At $i^*$, $M^d(Y_2)>M^s_1$ and there is a shortage of money.
    • Portfolio managers would sell bonds, the bond price would fall, and the interest would rise, except then it would no longer be at its target.
  3. Thus, the central bank increases the money supply with open market purchases of bonds to maintain $i = i^*$, i.e., they eliminate the shortage of money.