Economics of Finance and Banking Chapter 5
shifts in supply of bonds
1. expected profitability of investment opportunities 2. expected inflation 3. government budget
determinants of asset demand
1. wealth 2. expected return 3. risk 4. liquidity
income effect
a higher level of income causes the demand for money at each interest rate to increase and the demand curve to shift to the right
price level effect
a rise in the price level causes the demand for money at each interest rate to increase and the demand curve to shift to the right
expected inflation
an increase in the expected inflation causes the supply of bonds to increase and the supply curve to shift to the right
shifts in supply of money
an increase in the money supply engineered by the federal reserve will shift the supply curve for more money to the right
bond risk shift
an increase in the riskiness of bonds causes the demand for bonds to fall and the demand curve to shift to the left -an increase in the riskiness of alternative assets causes the demands for bonds to rise and the demand curve to shift to the right
asset market approach
asset market approach for understanding behavior in financial markets-which emphasizes stock of assets rather than flows in determining asset prices- is the dominant methodology used by economists, because correctly conducting analyses in terms of flows is very tricky, especially when we encounter inflation
liquidity preference framework
determines the equilibrium interest rate in terms of the supply of and demand for money.
shifts in demand for bonds
four parameters 1. wealth 2. expected returns on bonds relative to alternative assets 3. risk of bonds relative to alternative assets 4. liquidity of bonds relative to alternative assets
bond expected returns shift
higher expected interest rates in the future lower the expected return for long-term bonds, decrease the demand, and shift the demand curve to the left -lower expected interest rates in the future increase the demand for long-term bonds and shift the demand curve to the right -an increase in the expected rate of inflation lowers the expected return for bonds, causing their demand to decline and the demand curve to shift to the left
government budget
higher government deficits increase the supply of bonds and shifts the supply curve to the right -government surpluses decrease the supply of bonds and shift the supply curve to the left
bond wealth shift
in a business cycle expansion with growing wealth, the demand for bonds rises and the demand curve for bonds shifts to the right. in a recession, when income and wealth are falling, the demand for bonds falls, and demand curve shifts to the left
expected profitability of investment opportunities
in a business cycle expansion, the supply of bonds increases, and the supply curve shifts to the right. -in a recession, when there are far fewer expected profitable investment opportunities, the supply of bonds falls, and the supply curve shits to the left
bond liquidity shift
increased liquidity of bonds results in an increased demand for bonds, and the demand curve shifts to the right -increased liquidity of alternative assets lowers the demands for bonds and the demand curve shifts to the left
market equilibrium
occurs when the amount that people are willing to buy (demand) equals the amount that people are willing to sell (supply) at a given price. in the bond market this is achieved when the quantity of bonds demanded equals the quantity of bonds supplied
excess supply
quantity of bonds supplied exceeds the quantity of bonds demanded. people want to sell more than others want to buy, the price of the bond will fall.
demand curve
shows the relationship between quantity demanded and the price when all other economic variables are held constant
supply curve
shows the relationship between the quantity supplied and the price when all other economic variables are held constant
theory of asset demand
stats that, holding all of the other factors constant: 1. the quantity demanded of an asset is positively related to wealth 2. the quantity demanded of an asset is positively related to its expected return relative to alliterative assets 3. the quantity demanded of an asset is negatively related to the risk of its returns relative to alternative assets 4. the demand of an asset is positively related to its liquidity relative to alternative assets
opportunity cost
the amount of interest (expected return) sacrificed by not holding the alternative asset
risk
the degree of uncertainty associated with the return on one asset relative to alternative assets holding everything else constant, if an assets risk rises relative to that of alternative assets, its quantity demanded will fall
liquidity
the ease and speed with which an asset can be turned into cash relative to alternative assets the more liquid an asset is relative to alternative assets, holding everything else unchanged, the more desirable it is, and the greater will be the quantity demanded
expected return
the return expected over the next period on one asset relative to alternative assets an increase in an assets expected return relative to that of an alternative asset, holding everything else unchanged, raises the quantity demanded of the asset
wealth
the total resources owned by the individual holding everything else constant, an increase in wealth raises the quantity demanded of an asset
shifts in demand for money
two factors cause the demand curve for money to shift: income price level
fisher effect
when expected inflation rises, interest rates will rise
changes in income
when income is rising during a business cycle expansion (holding other economic variables constant) interest rates will rise
changes in money supply
when the money supply increases (everything else remains equal) interest rates will decline
changes in the price level
when the price level increases, with the supply of money and other economic variables held constant, interest rates will rise
excess demand
when the quantity of bonds demanded exceeds the quantity of bonds supplied. people want to buy more bonds than people are willing to sell, so the price of the bonds increase