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
Macrofinancial Stress Testing on Australian Banks
13 Sep 2023
RDP
PDF
1940KB
Research Discussion Paper 2022-03. September 2022. Financial Stability Department Reserve Bank of Australia. ... and people’s welfare. According to the Bank for International Settlements (BCBS 2010), financial.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2022/pdf/rdp2022-03.pdf
Data Description
21 Jun 2023
RDP
2023-05
Deposits and STF include total customer deposits, deposits from banks, money market instruments, certificates of deposit and other deposits. ... volatile around the financial crisis in 2008.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2023/2023-05/data-description.html
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The Impact of Interest Rates on Bank Profitability: A Retrospective Assessment Using New Cross-country Bank-level Data
8 Jun 2023
RDP
PDF
1310KB
Market Intelligence’s SNL Financial, which use strict criteria to ensure all variables are consistently. ... 2008 financial crisis is another factor that is likely to cause cross-country heterogeneity in the.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2023/pdf/rdp2023-05.pdf
Conclusion
12 May 2023
RDP
2023-04
We also use these surprise changes in yields around policy announcements as instruments to identify the macroeconomics effects of different facets of policy and its communication through the lens of a
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2023/2023-04/conclusion.html
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Can We Use High-frequency Yield Data to Better Understand the Effects of Monetary Policy and Its Communication? Yes and No!
1 May 2023
RDP
PDF
1465KB
Following Gertler and Karadi (2015), we identify the policy shock using an external instrument. ... than the monetary policy shock. The key identification assumption in the external instrument.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2023/pdf/rdp2023-04.pdf
Did Labour Market Concentration Lower Wages Growth Pre-COVID?
1 Mar 2023
RDP
2023-02
Some papers use instruments to help identify exogenous changes in market power/supply elasticity. ... Still, as productivity measurement is imperfect, I also estimate a version of the monopsony model where I use an instrument for concentration.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2023/2023-02/full.html
Did Labour Market Concentration Lower Wages Growth Pre-COVID?
28 Feb 2023
RDP
PDF
1812KB
Some papers use instruments to help identify exogenous changes in market power/supply elasticity. ... three financial year sub-samples: 2005-2007; 2008-2010 (GFC); 2011-2015 (post-GFC). This will allow.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2023/pdf/rdp2023-02.pdf
References
3 Jan 2023
RDP
2022-09
Braun R and R Brüggemann (forthcoming), ‘Identification of SVAR Models by Combining Sign Restrictions with External Instruments’, Journal of Business & Economic Statistics. ... Finlay R and D Olivan (2012), ‘Extracting Information from Financial
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2022/2022-09/references.html
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Estimating the Effects of Monetary Policy in Australia Using Sign-restricted Structural Vector Autoregressions
29 Dec 2022
RDP
PDF
1886KB
financial conditions. This proxy has been constructed with the purpose of measuring monetary policy. ... zero-coupon forward rates) to further purge the cash rate of variation that is anticipated by financial.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2022/pdf/rdp2022-09.pdf
The Consequences of Low Interest Rates for the Australian Banking Sector
21 Dec 2022
RDP
2022-08
But if the central bank has other considerations, such as financial stability, then the answer is not as clear. ... of the decline in Australian neutral rates following the global financial crisis (McCririck and Rees 2017), changes in the interest rates
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2022/2022-08/full.html
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