Search: domestic government securities

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RBA Glossary definition for domestic government securities

domestic government securities – Domestically issued government securities comprising Australian Government Securities (AGS) and securities, known as semi-government securities, issued by the central borrowing authorities of the State and Territory governments.

RBA Glossary definition for securities

securities – A financial instrument which represents a claim over real assets or a future income stream. Such instruments are usually tradeable. Examples of securities include bonds, bills of exchange, promissory notes, certificates of deposit and shares.

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The Main Questions

1 Dec 1988 RDP 8812
Ian Macfarlane
The upper panel shows yields on three-month government securities. Up to 1982, there were on occasion substantial differentials, but these did not persist for long. ... Figure 3 YIELDS ON GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. The same is true for bond rates.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1988/8812/main-questions.html

Appendix 1: The Interest Parity Condition

1 Dec 1988 RDP 8812
Ian Macfarlane
It is only available from July 1984. Debt is federal government securities in the hands of the private sector as a ratio to M3. ... The government debt term has the expected positive sign and is significant at conventional levels.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1988/8812/appendix-1.html

Appendix 2: Empirical Evidence on the Term Structure of Interest Rates in Australia

1 Dec 1988 RDP 8812
Ian Macfarlane
domestic securities. ... bond rates on domestic rates. The estimated negative coefficients indicate that a rise in the U.S.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1988/8812/appendix-2.html

Structural Background

1 Dec 1988 RDP 8812
Ian Macfarlane
This was done for short-term securities (Treasury notes) in 1979 and for longer-term government bonds in the middle of 1982. ... This has quickly translated to a rise in all short-term security yields.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1988/8812/structural-background.html

The Transmission of Monetary Policy

1 Dec 1988 RDP 8812
Ian Macfarlane
Outstandings in this market now amount to about $30 billion (compared, for example to $40 billion for the domestic government bond market and $60 billion for the bank bill market). ... Domestic interest rates are only part of the story of the
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1988/8812/transmission-of-monetary-policy.html