Volume 11, Issue 4 December 2015

The ECB Unconventional Monetary Policies: Have They Lowered Market Borrowing Costs for Banks and Governments?

Abstract

This paper evaluates the impact of the ECB's unconventional policies on bank and government borrowing costs. We employ event-based regressions to assess and compare the effects of asset purchases and exceptional liquidity announcements on money markets, covered bond markets, and sovereign bond markets. The results show that (i) exceptional liquidity measures (three-year loans to banks and setting the ECB deposit rate to zero) significantly reduced persistent moneymarket tensions and that (ii) asset purchases were the most effective in lowering refinancing costs of banks and governments in the presence of high sovereign risk. Moreover, we show that the ECB asset purchases fed through into other asset prices: bank covered bond purchases diminished sovereign spreads, while sovereign bond purchases reduced covered bond spreads.

Authors

  • Urszula Szczerbowicz

JEL codes

  • E43
  • E44
  • E52
  • E58

Other papers in this issue

Mikael Apel and Carl Andreas Claussen and Petra Lennartsdotter and Øistein Røisland

Eyal Argov and Alon Binyamini and Eliezer Borenstein and Irit Rozenshtrom