Deposit Convexity, Monetary Policy and Financial Stability

24 Pages Posted: 16 Oct 2023

See all articles by Emily Greenwald

Emily Greenwald

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Sam Schulhofer-Wohl

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Josh Younger

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Date Written: October, 2023

Abstract

In principle, bank deposits can be withdrawn on demand. In practice, depositors tend to maintain stable balances for long periods, allowing banks to fund long-dated assets. Nevertheless, the cost of deposit funding influences banks’ capacity for maturity transformation. Banks and researchers conventionally model the response of deposit interest rates to market interest rates as constant, implying that deposits have nearly constant duration. Contrary to this standard assumption, we show empirically that the “beta” of deposit rates to market rates increases as market rates rise, causing the duration of deposits to fall. The amount of duration risk delivered to bank balance sheets via this channel from March 2022 to September 2023 is comparable in magnitude to the amount of duration risk absorbed by each of the several large-scale asset purchase programs the Federal Reserve has undertaken since 2008. Dynamic betas present a significant challenge to bank portfolio hedgers by introducing large and dynamic risks that are difficult to model and impractical to replicate on the asset side of the balance sheet. As a result, deposit convexity amplifies monetary policy transmission and increases financial fragility, mechanisms that recent banking stresses have highlighted.

Keywords: banks, Depository institutions, interest rates, bank run, financial markets, central bank, monetary policy, Policy Effects

JEL Classification: E43, E44, E52, G12, G21

Suggested Citation

Greenwald, Emily and Schulhofer-Wohl, Sam and Younger, Josh, Deposit Convexity, Monetary Policy and Financial Stability (October, 2023). FRB of Dallas Working Paper No. 2315, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4602078 or http://dx.doi.org/10.24149/wp2315

Emily Greenwald (Contact Author)

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Sam Schulhofer-Wohl

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas ( email )

2200 North Pearl Street
PO Box 655906
Dallas, TX 75265-5906
United States

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago ( email )

230 South LaSalle Street
Chicago, IL 60604
United States

HOME PAGE: http://sschulh1.wordpress.com

Josh Younger

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of New York ( email )

33 Liberty Street
New York, NY 10045
United States

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