Showing posts with label ECB policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ECB policy. Show all posts

Sunday, January 22, 2012

22/1/2012: An update to Euribor risk premium post

On the foot of the previous post, I recomputed risk premia for 3 maturities: 12, 9 and 6 months euribor. Here's the chart:
And some top of the line numbers:

To compare against rates dynamics:

22/1/2012: What do interbank lending rates tell us about risk valuations?

Here is an interesting set of charts for euribor:



Notice that as maturity span shortens, there is an increasingly rapid decline in the rates in recent month. This, of course, is a reflection of two forces acting simultaneously - the ECB LTRO and the rate drop in December. You can see this here in the context of 12 months euribor plot for end-of-month (and end of last week for January 2012):

Sounds good? Indeed, the short-term end of liquidity curve improved dramatically, but... here's a trick - the long-term end of the curve is not improving as much as (1) the repo rate supports, and (2) LTRO (3 year facility) should lead it to. To see this - here's a chart:

And the above term premium is rising despite the risk premium falling:

Note: the last chart above is not seasonally adjusted and, with exception for 2010, euribor rates tend to fall seasonally in January compared to December.

In fact, current risk premia are well above the long-term relations and at more extreme end of the spectrum than during the previous months:

The above suggests to me that what we are observing in the liquidity markets is a combination of some improvement due to ECB's LTRO move (substitution along maturity curve) and the (very) incomplete pass through of ECB rate change to funding markets. There appears to be no evidence in risk reduction anywhere in sight.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

26/10/2011: ECB madness

Updated: includes latest data through September 2011:

ECB's past policy in a pic:


And he above madness is consistent with price stability mandate. No, I am not kidding - it was consistent with price stability mandate, even though it was killing weakening euro area economy...

In fact, price stability at 2% target for HICP would require current ECB rates to be in the neighborhood of 2.5-2.75%.

And note from the second chart below - of all major central banks, ECB is the only one to have raised rates since November 2010.

Let me provide a quote from the economist I rarely agree with: "The bitter truth is that it’s looking more and more as if the euro system is doomed. And the even more bitter truth is that given the way that system has been performing, Europe might be better off if it collapses sooner rather than later." Paul Krugman (source: here)