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
Australian Money Market Divergence: Arbitrage Opportunity or Illusion?
12 Sep 2019
RDP
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1464KB
characteristics of financial instruments are taken into account, there is no reason why the price of. ... Major banks were important providers of liquidity in money markets prior to the financial crisis.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2019/pdf/rdp2019-09.pdf
Monetary Policy Goals for Inflation in Australia
30 Nov 2009
RDP
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85KB
What rate of inflation is, in Chairman Greenspan’s words, sufficiently low that itdoes not “materially enter business and household financial decisions”? ... G7 economies. 10. where X is a vector of explanatory variables (including the instruments
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1995/pdf/rdp9503.pdf
OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS IN AUSTRALIA: A U.S. PERSPECTIVE Michael ...
17 Oct 2014
RDP
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817KB
Bank uses the cash rate as its operating instrument it does not peg the. ... some desired value of real or normal income, and employs an instrument, either.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1987/pdf/rdp8702.pdf
The Supervisory Treatment of Banks’ Market Risk
30 Nov 2009
RDP
PDF
76KB
Increased volatility in theprices of financial instruments and other financial assets opened new opportunitiesfor profit for financial institutions from the trading of those instruments. ... The foreign exchangeproposal differs from the debt instruments
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1994/pdf/rdp9408.pdf
Does Equity Mispricing Influence Household and Firm Decisions?
22 Dec 2011
RDP
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469KB
ε f ,Ttεb,Tt. ](16). I further assume there exists an observable instrument (or set of instruments)Zt =. [z′1t ,. ,z. ′kt]′. , a k1 vector (k 1), with the properties that,. ... With this caveat in mind, I test whether this third instrument is
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2011/pdf/rdp2011-06.pdf
An Empirical Examination of the Fisher Effect in Australia
30 Nov 2009
RDP
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96KB
Instruments were chosenon the basis of error correction models similar to equations (8) and (9) with? = ... They were estimated separately for each sub-period and then amalgamated usingdummies to provide instruments for the full sample.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1994/pdf/rdp9410.pdf
Issues in Modelling Monetary Policy
1 Dec 2009
RDP
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94KB
This aspect of model designinvolves assumptions about the choice of instrument, the form of decision-rulesrelating instruments to objectives and the operational meaning of a ‘no policychange’ assumption with respect to ... The recent asset-price
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1996/pdf/rdp9604.pdf
Trends in the Funding and Lending Behaviour of Australian Banks
2 Feb 2015
RDP
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1090KB
domestic corporations, as well as banks in other countries prior to the global financial crisis. ... types of financial instruments.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2013/pdf/rdp2013-15.pdf
On Some Recent Developments in Monetary Economics
19 Nov 2012
RDP
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829KB
temporary equilibria. The movement of these temporary equilibria depends on. the behaviour of stocks of real and financial instruments, since it is these. ... interest on different financial instruments. It has not necessarily led,. however, to an
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1986/pdf/rdp8605.pdf
Do Interest Rates Affect Business Investment? Evidence from Australian Company-level Data
27 Apr 2018
RDP
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1257KB
outstanding debt instruments at the end of their financial year.4. There is significant heterogeneity in the borrowing rates paid by companies. ... been consistently lower after the financial crisis than before the crisis (Figure 6).
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2018/pdf/rdp2018-05.pdf