Quantitative Easing and the Hot Potato Effect: Evidence from Euro Area Banks

45 Pages Posted: 4 Feb 2019 Last revised: 11 Feb 2019

See all articles by Ellen Ryan

Ellen Ryan

European Central Bank (ECB)

Karl Whelan

University College Dublin (UCD)

Date Written: February 2019

Abstract

We use a bank-level data set to examine the behaviour of central bank reserves in the euro area banking system over the course of the ECB QE programme. Previous research on QE has generally paid little attention to the role of reserve dynamics within the banking system and some have assumed that the system passively absorbs additional reserves generated by asset purchases. However, with a negative deposit rate in place throughout the sample we study, euro area banks have had a disincentive to hold excess reserves and thus could wish to treat them as a "hot potato" that is preferably passed on to other banks. We find evidence for this hot potato effect, reporting substantial month-to-month churn in bank reserves as well as evidence that banks are responding to high reserve balances by pushing them off their balance sheets. Unlike in the traditional money multiplier model, where excess reserves are used in loan creation, banks appear to be primarily managing reserves through debt security purchases. As such, this hot potato effect seems likely to have had an effect on European bond yields that is distinct from the portfolio rebalancing effect emphasised in the QE literature thus far.

Keywords: central banks, Quantitative easing, Reserves

JEL Classification: E4, E5, G21

Suggested Citation

Ryan, Ellen and Whelan, Karl, Quantitative Easing and the Hot Potato Effect: Evidence from Euro Area Banks (February 2019). CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP13499, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3328510

Ellen Ryan (Contact Author)

European Central Bank (ECB) ( email )

Sonnemannstrasse 22
Frankfurt am Main, 60314
Germany

Karl Whelan

University College Dublin (UCD) ( email )

Belfield
Belfield, Dublin 4 4
Ireland

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