Search: Blackout Financial Instruments
RBA Glossary definition for Blackout Financial Instruments
Blackout Financial Instruments – Blackout Financial Instruments� include interest rate products (including but not limited to bonds, bills, notes, certificates of deposit and term deposits), shares, warrants, options, corporate bonds and foreign exchange (except for travel purposes), active investment choice modifications to any superannuation fund account, and the rolling over of superannuation funds into a complying fund.
Search Results
Designing Inflation Targets | Conference – 1997
21 Jul 1997
Conferences
where i. t. is the policy instrument, π. tj. is inflation at time tj, E. ... And the deviation between this feedback variable and the inflation target dictates the necessary degree of instrument adjustment.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1997/haldane.html
Twenty-five Years of Inflation Targeting in Australia | Conference – 2018
12 Apr 2018
Conferences
The first is the role of financial stability in an inflation-targeting framework. ... An assessment of the effectiveness of these instruments is still a work in progress.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2018/debelle.html
Monetary and Macroprudential Policies: The Case for a Separation of Powers
10 Feb 2020
Conferences
PDF
1527KB
RBA Conference Volume 2018
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2018/pdf/rba-conference-volume-2018-broadbent.pdf
Twenty-five Years of Inflation Targeting in Australia: Are There Better Alternatives for the Next Twenty-five Years? | Conference – 2018
12 Apr 2018
Conferences
incorporating financial stability can be described by a loss function of the form:. ... t. is a measure of financial risks and 0 < β < 1 is a discount factor.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2018/mckibbin-panton.html
Restructuring and Reform: China 2016 | Conference – 2016
18 Mar 2016
Conferences
Financial services has four sub-components: money and banking services, capital market services, insurance services and other. ... The data have been collected since 2008, initially in response to worries about the effect of the global financial crisis.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2016/naughton.html
The Role of the Exchange Rate in Monetary Policy – the Experience of Other Countries | Conference – 1993
12 Jul 1993
Conferences
The reason is fairly obvious: the principal instrument of monetary policy is the interest rate, and exchange rates respond to actual or expected interest rate changes. ... the authorities have adequate policy instruments to target exchange rates with at
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1993/artis.html
Liquidity, Financial Crises and the Lender of Last Resort – How Much of a Departure is the Sub-prime Crisis? | Conference – 2008
14 Jul 2008
Conferences
Of course, the systemic importance of interbank markets has increased because of recent trends in financial innovation. ... This requires instruments be available such as reverse repos, foreign exchange swaps and deposit facilities.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2008/davis.html
Some Principles of Financial Regulation: Lessons from the United States | Conference – 1991
21 Jun 1991
Conferences
Various financial institutions vie with one another to invent instruments that the public will regard as money. ... To escape the profit ceiling imposed by limits on monetary growth, financial institutions have shown great ingenuity in inventing new
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1991/wojnilower.html
Exploring the Link between the Macroeconomic and Financial Cycles
10 Feb 2020
Conferences
PDF
1989KB
RBA Conference Volume 2017
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2017/pdf/rba-conference-volume-2017-cagliarini-price.pdf
Financial-asset Prices and Monetary Policy: Theory and Evidence | Conference – 1997
21 Jul 1997
Conferences
In contrast, policy rates need to move strongly in response to financial shocks. ... The instruments used are two lags of quarterly changes in the underlying inflation rate, the log terms of trade, the policy rate and the three financial variables, two
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1997/smets.html