RDP 2004-10: News and Interest Rate Expectations: A Study of Six Central Banks 1. Introduction

Central banks around the world have become considerably more transparent over the past decade. An important part of this has been the increased efforts by central banks to communicate their views about the economic outlook and its implications for monetary policy. On an abstract level, if a central bank was operating a fully transparent monetary policy rule, market participants would only require macroeconomic news to anticipate future changes in monetary policy. However, in practice, policy-makers must deal with uncertainty and structural change, which requires them to use some discretion in formulating policy. No policy framework can specify how the policy-maker should respond to every possible contingency. Therefore, there is a role for central banks to regularly articulate their thinking to help market participants filter macroeconomic news.

There is a substantial body of academic work on the theoretical and empirical aspects of monetary policy transparency. In a recent study, Coppel and Connolly (2003) found that the predictability of monetary policy is very similar across a panel of central banks in developed economies, possibly reflecting similarities in central bank communication strategies. Our study expands their results by asking which channels of communication influence expectations of future policy. One approach to address this question is to examine empirically the effect of different channels of central bank communication on financial market expectations of future interest rates. Of course, the impact of monetary policy communication has to be judged in the light of other news events, which can have a much larger effect on the market, such as international developments, domestic macroeconomic data releases and monetary policy decisions themselves. In this paper we therefore estimate the impact of four types of news on interest rate expectations: domestic macroeconomic news, foreign news, monetary policy surprises and central bank communication.

The effect of macroeconomic news and policy decisions on interest rate expectations has been the subject of a number of event studies that investigate what moves interest rate futures, in which interest rate expectations are embedded. The widely used approach in this literature is to estimate the daily change in interest rate futures as a function of macroeconomic and policy surprises. However, it is more difficult to measure the impact of monetary policy communication on interest rate futures. The main reason is the difficulty of quantifying the information content of, for example, a speech in a one-dimensional measure. It is even sometimes difficult to establish the direction in which a certain communication event should influence interest rate expectations. One way of measuring the impact of policy news, irrespective of the direction of movement, is to examine its effect on the variance of interest rate futures on the day. Both elements – the effect of macroeconomic and monetary policy surprises on the change in interest rate futures and the effect of central bank communication on the variance of interest rate futures – are combined in the GARCH-type model applied in this paper.

A few papers have empirically examined this issue for individual economies, such as a recent study for the United States by Kohn and Sack (2003), and for Australia by Campbell and Lewis (1998). In this paper we apply a framework similar to that suggested by Kohn and Sack to a panel of economies (Australia, Canada, the euro area, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States), which allows us to compare central bank communication channels across different institutional frameworks.

Our results suggest that central bank communication is not a large contributor to overall movements in interest rate futures. We find that the important channels of communication add only a few basis points to the standard deviation of rates on the days on which these communication events occur, which is a small minority of trading days. In comparison, across all trading days, the standard deviation of daily changes in the futures rates averages around 6 basis points for our panel of economies. Domestic and foreign macroeconomic news events that we examine occur on a majority of trading days and make a much larger contribution to the variance of changes in interest rate futures. This pattern holds across all economies.

While the effects of central bank communication are generally small, we find that they increase the standard deviation of interest rates on the day on which the communication occurs, as a result of providing new information to the markets. Among the different types of communication, commentaries following rate decisions, monetary policy reports and parliamentary hearings are found to have the greatest influence on expectations for future policy in the economies examined. Speeches, on the other hand, have typically much less of an impact.

The remainder of the paper is structured as follows. The next section reviews some conceptual considerations on how news affects interest rate expectations of financial markets. Section 3 discusses the data and some preliminary empirical evidence of the link between news and interest rate futures, followed by the estimation of a full-scale model in Section 4. Section 5 concludes.