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Quantitative Easing and Japanese Bank Equity Values

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TLDR
The authors conducted an event study concerning the anticipated impact of quantitative easing on the Japanese banking sector by examining the impact of the introduction and expansion of the policy on Japanese bank equity values and found that excess returns of Japanese banks were greater when increases in the BOJ current account balance target were accompanied by "nonstandard" expansionary policies, such as raising the ceiling on BOJ purchases of longterm Japanese government bonds.
Abstract
One of the primary motivations offered by the Bank of Japan (BOJ) for its quantitative easing program - whereby it maintained a current account balance target in excess of required reserves, effectively pegging short-term interest rates at zero - was to maintain credit extension by the troubled Japanese financial sector. We conduct an event study concerning the anticipated impact of quantitative easing on the Japanese banking sector by examining the impact of the introduction and expansion of the policy on Japanese bank equity values. We find that excess returns of Japanese banks were greater when increases in the BOJ current account balance target were accompanied by "nonstandard" expansionary policies, such as raising the ceiling on BOJ purchases of longterm Japanese government bonds. We also provide cross-sectional evidence that suggests that the market perceived that the quantitative easing program would disproportionately benefit financially weaker Japanese banks.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Lessons from the Bank of England on 'quantitative easing' and other 'unconventional' monetary policies☆

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effectiveness of the "quantitative easing" policy, as officially implemented by the Bank of England since March 2009, and found that the policy had no apparent effect on the UK economy.
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The Lessons from QE and Other 'Unconventional' Monetary Policies - Evidence from the Bank of England

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effectiveness of the "quantitative easing" policy, as implemented by the Bank of England in March 2009, by measuring the impact of bank of England policies (including, but not limited to QE) on nominal GDP growth.
References
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Posted ContentDOI

The Zero Bound on Interest Rates and Optimal Monetary Policy

TL;DR: The question of the proper conduct of monetary policy in the presence of a lower bound of zero for overnight nominal interest rates has recently become a topic of lively interest as mentioned in this paper, and the question of how policy should be conducted when the zero bound is reached or when the possibility of reaching it can no longer be ignored.
Book

Monetary Policy Alternatives at the Zero Bound: An Empirical Assessment

TL;DR: In this article, the problem of monetary policy in most major industrial economies is the very short term nominal interest rate, such as the overnight federal funds rate in the case of the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conducting Monetary Policy at Very Low Short-Term Interest Rates

TL;DR: This article discuss three strategies for stimulating the economy at an unchanged level of the policy rate: providing assurance to investors that short rates will be kept lower in the future than they currently expect, changing the relative supplies of securities in the marketplace by altering the composition of the central bank's balance sheet, and increasing the size of the balance sheet beyond the level needed to set the short-term policy rate at zero (quantitative easing).
Posted Content

What Ended the Great Depression

TL;DR: The authors examined the role of aggregate demand stimulus in ending the Great Depression and found that nearly all of the observed recovery of the U.S. economy prior to 1942 was due to monetary expansion.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of the Bank of Japan’s Zero Interest Rate Commitment and Quantitative Monetary Easing on the Yield Curve: A Macro-Finance Approach

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of the zero interest rate commitment and quantitative monetary easing on medium-to long-term interest rates in Japan have been investigated, and it has been concluded that the BOJ's monetary policy since 1999 has functioned mainly through the zero-interest rate commitment, which has led to declines in medium- to longterm interest rate.
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