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Author Archives: Tony Yates
Post-Syriza post
There are many positives and negatives in the Syriza victory. The most obvious positive in the Syriza result is that especially in a young and fragile democracy, it’s good for the established politicians to be kicked out once in a … Continue reading
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Greece’s fragile primary budget surplus is not much of a bargaining chip
One reason cited [1] for why Syriza will be able to talk tough with the Troika, presuming it wins today, and can form a government, is that it has a healthy [circa 5%] primary budget surplus. That’s the difference between … Continue reading
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On the lack of equity purchases in the ECB QE plan
There’s disappointment from some that the new ECB QE plan won’t incorporate the purchase of equities. A few points. 1. Equities are issued by companies that can! [Don’t ever criticise this blog for lack of depth on finance matters]. And … Continue reading
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QE as debt management means ECB vs 19 DMOs
Larry Summers and others have wondered how much the US Treasury’s tilt towards easing undid the Fed’s program of quantitative easing, pointing out that the central bank stimulus was hampered by an uncoordinated and opportunistic change in issuance as longer … Continue reading
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ECB QE: get rid of ‘but below’ to sharpen open ended promise
So, ECB QE surprised a little. 60bn per month, not 50. A re-emphasis of the determination to buy private sector assets too. Most importantly, stressing that the purchases were open-ended, to be continued until there was a sustained improvement in … Continue reading
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ECB QE. Much too late and not to be counted on.
That’s my view, and for a few reasons. First, the impact of macroeconomic policies is partly about how they affect expectations. The slow, drawn out, reluctant, piecemeal way that the ECB has handled the crisis so far [OMT excepted, that … Continue reading
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Swiss National Bank, or Swiss Private Seigniorage Machine?
One speculation in the blogosphere – for example in Gawyn Davies’ FT blog – is that the peculiar ownership structure of the Swiss National Bank is behind its decision to abandon the exchange rate cap last week. Modern central banks … Continue reading
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