Home arrow Haberler
Home
Airport
Astronomie
Atomuhr
Auto
Cafe' Conzept
Bank
D Banken
D BGB
D HGB
D StGB
D StVO
D StVZO
D Domain-Host
D Kennzeichen
D Krankenkassen
D PLZ
D Versicherer
D Vorwahlen
Erfinder
Flaggen / Bayrak
Haberler
Hauptstädte
Link
Länderkennzeichen
Milliarder
Nobel
Nobel Ödülleri
Periodensystem
T.C. Atatürk
Unternehmen/Sirkt.
Wappen / Forslar
Kontakt
Suche / Ara
Heute: 52
Gestern: 206
Monat: 2337
Total 1838155
Seiten Monat 11846
Seiten Total 8585139
Seit:
Kein Benutzer Online
 
Haberler
ECB - European Central Bank
Latest releases on the ECB website - Press releases, speeches and interviews, press conferences.

  • ESS-ESCB Quality assessment report on statistics underlying the Macroeconomic Imbalance Procedure


  • Global evidence on profit shifting within firms and across time
    We provide estimates of profit shifting for over 2 million firm-year observations in 100 countries over the period 2009–2020. Employing nonparametric estimation techniques within a mainstay model of profit shifting, we examine how the profits of both parent and subsidiary firms within a multinational group respond to marginal changes in the composite tax indicator. The key advantage of this approach is that it yields firm-year estimates of profit shifting. Multinational firms engage in extensive profit shifting by maintaining affiliates in low-tax countries and zero-tax havens. Multinational groups with an ultimate tax-haven owner exhibit the largest profit response to tax incentives. Our new database opens important avenues for analyzing the sources and effects of profit shifting.

  • Falling interest rates and credit reallocation: lessons from general equilibrium
    We show that in a canonical model with heterogeneous entrepreneurs, financial frictions, and an imperfectly elastic supply of capital, a fall in the interest rate has an ambiguous effect on aggregate economic activity. In partial equilibrium, a lower interest rate raises aggregate investment both by relaxing financial constraints and by prompting relatively less productive entrepreneurs to invest. In general equilibrium, however, this higher demand for capital raises its price and crowds out investment by more productive entrepreneurs. When this reallocation is strong enough, a fall in the interest rate reduces aggregate output. A numerical exploration of the model suggests that this reallocation effect i s quantitatively significant an d – in response to persistent changes in th e interest rate – stronger than the traditional balance-sheet channel. We provide evidence of the reallocation effect using US firm-level data.

  • Local institutional ownership and price discovery around extreme weather events
    In this event study, we analyze the effect of market segmentation on stock returns in Europe amid extreme weather events. We show that local institutional ownership (LIO) mitigates the negative effect of the uncertainty from the occurrence of extreme weather events on stock prices. We assess firms’ exposure to physical climate risks using the Eurosystem’s method that uses physical climate risk indicators. In a sample with materially exposed industries, we find a negative risk-adjusted abnormal return of 99 basis points for storms on the event date. This negative return is mitigated however by 1.3% for each percentage point increase in LIO. We confirm the mitigating role of LIO by testing the information hypothesis through two channels: the distance between a firm’s headquarters and the affected facility and its exposure to physical risk.

  • Strike while the iron is hot – optimal monetary policy under state-dependent pricing
    We characterize optimal monetary policy under state-dependent pricing. The framework gives rise to nonlinear inflation dynamics: The flexibility of the price level increases after large shocks due to an endogenous rise in the frequency of price changes. In response to large cost-push shocks, optimal policy leverages the lower sacrifice ratio to curb inflation. When faced with total factor productivity shocks, an efficient disturbance, the optimal policy commits to strict price stability. The optimal long-run inflation rate is just above zero.

  • The unexpected upside of depreciation: bridging Europe’s income divide
    This paper investigates the impact of foreign exchange (FX) shocks on income inequality across 31 European countries from 2003 to 2021. Leveraging a unique database of household-level longitudinal data from the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) and exchange rate data from the Bank of International Settlements, we investigate how currency devaluations and appreciations influence income distribution. Our findings indicate that a 1% currency devaluation decreases income inequality by 15 basis points within one year, while appreciations have the reverse effect. Contrary to previous studies focused on Latin America, which credit reductions in inequality to both labor mobility and union influence, our analysis identifies labor mobility as the primary factor in Europe. Furthermore, we discover that income changes are predominantly driven by variations in income per hour rather than hours worked.

  • The central bank’s balance sheet and treasury market disruptions
    This paper studies how Treasury market dynamics depend on adjustments to the central bank balance sheet. We introduce a dynamic model of Treasury bonds with traditional and shadow banks. In the model, both Treasury and repo market disruptions arise as a joint consequence of three frictions: (i) balance sheet costs,(ii) intraday reserves requirements, and (iii) imperfect substitutability between repo and bank deposits. Our model highlights the critical role of both sides of the central bank’s balance sheet as well as agents’ anticipation of shocks and policy interventions in matching observed market dynamics.

  • The Eurosystem’s exploratory work on new technologies for wholesale central bank money settlement


  • Report on monetary policy tools, strategy and communication
    This report focuses on the implications of the changed inflation environment for the ECB’s monetary policy strategy, including the lessons learned from both the low inflation and high inflation periods, and the transition from one to the other. The starting point of the report is the outcome of the Monetary Policy Strategy Review 2020-21. While the previous review was conducted in an economic environment of low inflation, with interest rates in proximity to the effective lower bound (ELB), the inflation surge that followed the COVID-19 pandemic underscores the importance of a monetary policy strategy that enables the Governing Council to effectively respond to major changes in the inflation environment.

  • A strategic view on the economic and inflation environment in the euro area
    This report offers a strategic view on the economic and inflation environment in the euro area as part of the monetary policy strategy assessment 2025. It reassesses the factors shaping the inflation and economic environment in light of the recent inflation experience, analyses changes in structural factors and examines the implications for the inflation environment the ECB is likely to face. It also draws conclusions regarding the enhancements that need to be made to the existing analytical toolkit and inflation forecasting.

  • The international dimension of repo: five new facts
    We analyze the international dimension of repo markets using novel euro area regulatory microdata. Our findings highlight the deep integration of funding markets across the Atlantic and the US dollar’s outsized role. Our paper documents five key facts: (1) US dollar repos by euro area entities account for approximately 40% of total volumes and are comparable in size to euro repos; (2) term repos (with maturities beyond one day) are quantitatively more relevant than commonly thought, especially non-centrally cleared ones; (3) repo markets have become more collateral-driven, involving diverse nonbank financial players and trading motives; (4) banks’ intragroup transactions form a large share of non-centrally cleared volumes; and (5) haircuts, even for riskier collateral, are often zero or negative, especially in euro trades. We show in two empirical applications that US monetary policy shocks spill over to euro repo rates and that negative haircuts arise from market power and collateral demand dynamics.

  • Inflation and floating-rate loans: evidence from the euro-area
    We provide novel evidence on the supply-side transmission of monetary policy through a floating-rate channel. After a rate hike, firms with floating-rate loans keep prices elevated to offset higher borrowing costs, thereby reducing the effectiveness of monetary policy. Using monthly data on product-level prices, industry-level inflation rates and the euro-area credit register from 2021 to 2023, we find that the short-run impact of monetary tightening on inflation is 50% smaller when firms rely on floating-rate loans. This effect is stronger for firms that rely more on working capital to finance production and when they can easily pass on higher prices to their sticky customerbase (customer capital). Since firms with floating-rate loans face an increase in their financial burden, their loan terms are more frequently renegotiated, often resulting in reduced spreads and a shift from floating to fixed rates. Overall, if firms across the euro area had a lower reliance on floating-rate loans, inflation would have been 0.8 percentage points lower in 2022-2023.

  • Letter from the ECB President to Mr Bas Eickhout, MEP, on the secondary objective


  • Enhancing GDP nowcasts with ChatGPT: a novel application of PMI news releases
    This study involves tasking ChatGPT with classifying an “activity sentiment score” based on PMI news releases. It explores the predictive power of this score for euro area GDP nowcasting. We find that the PMI text scores enhance GDP nowcasts beyond what is embedded in ECB/Eurosystem Staff projections and Eurostat’s first GDP estimate. The ChatGPT-derived activity score retains its significance in regressions that also include the composite output PMI diffusion index. GDP nowcasts are significantly enhanced with PMI text scores even when accounting for methodological variations, excluding extraordinary economic events like the pandemic, and for different GDP growth quantiles. However, the forecast gains from the enhancement of GDP nowcasts with ChatGPT scores are time dependent, varying by calendar years. Sizeable forecast gains of on average about 20% were obtained apart from the two most recent years due to exceptionally low forecast errors of the two benchmarks, especially the first GDP estimate.

  • A decade of borrower-based measures in the banking union
    Borrower-based measures (BBMs) are critical tools in the banking union’s macroprudential policy frameworks. They are designed to promote sustainable lending practices and strengthen the resilience of borrowers, lenders and the broader economy. Over the past decade, the adoption of BBMs has significantly increased across countries in the banking union, likely reflecting their effectiveness. This article reviews ten years of experience with the implementation of BBMs within banking union countries, with a view to facilitating peer learning and providing a comprehensive overview of BBM strategies and applications.


Umfrage
Wie haben Sie uns gefunden?
  
Zur Zeit Online
Statistics
Besucher: 8687037
Wetter

Deine IP
Dein System:

Deine IP: 216.73.216.233
Dein ISP: 216.233
Domaincheck

Ihre Wunschdomain
Domain: 

Güldag