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
Robust Design Principles for Monetary Policy Committees | Conference – 2018
12 Apr 2018
Conferences
Lehman Brothers was the fourth largest US investment bank and key counterparty to a huge array of outstanding financial transactions. ... Borio C and P Lowe (2002), ‘Asset Prices, Financial and Monetary Stability: Exploring the Nexus’, BIS Working
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2018/archer-levin.html
Change and Constancy in the Financial System: Implications for Financial Distress and Policy | Conference – 2007
20 Aug 2007
Conferences
This complexity applies to individual financial instruments. As the slicing and dicing of risks has become increasingly sophisticated in an effort to tailor the products to the demand of ultimate users, ... Take accounting first. Despite favourable
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2007/borio.html
Banking in the 21st Century: The Transformation of an Industry | Conference – 1996
9 Jul 1996
Conferences
and complex financial instruments; and the globalisation of financial markets. ... Browne (1992) notes that ‘financial innovation has now provided savers with greater flexibility in managing their portfolios by enhancing the available instrument choice,
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1996/llewellyn.html
Rates Normalization Amid Elevated Global Financial Vulnerabilities
29 Dec 2022
Conferences
PDF
1623KB
RBA Annual Conference 2022
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2022/pdf/rba-conference-2022-natalucci.pdf
It Takes More Than a Bubble to Become Japan | Conference – 2003
18 Aug 2003
Conferences
The Economist and the Financial Times), however, seems to say that the destiny of any bubble economy is an extended recession. ... These rate cuts took place against a background of financial liberalisation in the mid 1980s that had the BOJ placing
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2003/posen.html
The Debate on Alternatives for Monetary Policy in Australia | Conference – 1997
21 Jul 1997
Conferences
final-targeting systems, where an interest-rate instrument is used in the direct targeting of final objectives;. ... Still others regard instrument-setting as an essentially technical detail, and focus only on the choice of targets.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1997/edey.html
The Evolution of Financial Deregulation | Conference – 1991
21 Jun 1991
Conferences
This provided an important constraint on the development of the financial sector, by “crowding out” other financial instruments, by limiting me scope for interest-rate flexibility and through the “captive” arrangements ... Thus the increasing
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1991/grenville.html
Discussion of Fiscal, Monetary and Macroprudential Regimes: Incentives-Values Compatibility in Constitutional Democracies and Global Trends …
29 Dec 2022
Conferences
PDF
84KB
RBA Annual Conference 2022
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2022/pdf/rba-conference-2022-tucker-del-negro-discussion.pdf
New Financial Stability Governance and Central Banks | Conference – 2017
16 Mar 2017
Conferences
Both sets of structures should facilitate better engagement between financial regulators and macro policymakers. ... However, they find only modest evidence that better FSRs yielded better financial stability outcomes.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2017/edge-liang.html
Is Monetary Policy Less Effective When Interest Rates Are Persistently Low? | Conference – 2017
16 Mar 2017
Conferences
The adverse implications for productivity growth become considerably larger if the bust ushers in a financial crisis. ... Indeed, the consecutive programs seem to have had a progressively smaller effect on financial market prices (Figure 6).
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2017/borio-hofmann.html