Volume 11, Issue 1 January 2015

Responses to the Financial Crisis, Treasury Debt, and the Impact on Short-Term Money Markets

Abstract

The United States introduced several programs in response to the financial crisis. We examine responses involving Treasury debt-the Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLF), Supplementary Financing Program (SFP), Treasury issuance, open-market operations-and associated impacts on collateralized funding markets. We find the TSLF uniquely effective, due primarily to its introduction during the financial crisis. We find some evidence that the SFP helped alleviate funding market stress. This is notable, as the SFP actually drained bank reserves. Our results show that the proper policy response to a financial crisis can involve options beyond an increase in the level of bank reserves.

Authors

  • Warren B. Hrung
  • Jason S. Seligman

JEL codes

  • G01
  • E52
  • E63

Other papers in this issue

Tatiana Damjanovic and Vladislav Damjanovic and Charles Nolan

Pierre L. Siklos and Matthias Neuenkirch

Jan in 't Veld and Andrea Pagano and Rafal Raciborski and Marco Ratto and Werner Roeger

Giovanni Di Bartolomeo and Patrizio Tirelli and Nicola Acocella

Simon Dubecq and Benoit Mojon and Xavier Ragot