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Featured researches published by Gabriele Galati.


Journal of Economic Surveys | 2012

Macroprudential Policy – A Literature Review

Gabriele Galati; Richhild Moessner

The recent financial crisis has highlighted the need to go beyond a purely micro approach to financial regulation and supervision. In recent months, the number of policy speeches, research papers and conferences that discuss a macro perspective on financial regulation has grown considerably. The policy debate is focusing in particular on macroprudential tools and their usage, their relationship with monetary policy, their implementation and their effectiveness. Macroprudential policy has recently also attracted considerable attention among researchers. This paper provides an overview of research on this topic. We also identify important future research questions that emerge from both the literature and the current policy debate.


Financial Markets, Institutions and Instruments | 2003

The Impact of the Euro on Europe's Financial Markets

Gabriele Galati; Kostas Tsatsaronis

This paper presents an overview of the impact of the introduction of the euro on Europes financial structure. It analyses changes in money markets, bond markets, equity markets and foreign exchange markets. The euros role in originating or catalysing trends has been uneven across the spectrum of financial markets. On the lender side, banks and investors in fixed income markets have become more focused on the characteristics of individual borrowers rather than the nationality of the issuer and have built up expertise to evaluate credit risk. European equity markets have also been affected by the enhanced ability of investors to build strategies with a pan-European perspective as prices increasingly reflected risk factors specific to industrial sectors rather than individual countries. On the borrower side, EMU has increased the attractiveness of market-based financing methods by allowing debt issuers to tap institutional portfolios across the euro area. Lower barriers to cross-border financial transactions have also increased the contestability of the market for financial services, be it at the wholesale or the retail level.


Economica | 2018

What Do We Know About the Effects of Macroprudential Policy

Gabriele Galati; Richhild Moessner

The literature on the effectiveness of macroprudential policy tools is still in its infancy and has so far provided only limited guidance for policy decisions. In recent years, however, increasing efforts have been made to fill this gap. Progress has been made in embedding macroprudential policy in theoretical models. There is increasing empirical work on the effect of some macroprudential tools on a range of target variables, such as quantities and prices of credit, asset prices, and on the amplitude of the financial cycle and financial stability. In this paper we review recent progress in theoretical and empirical research on the effectiveness of macroprudential instruments.


Archive | 2011

How Do Inflation Expectations Form? New Insights from a High-Frequency Survey

Gabriele Galati; Peter Heemeijer; Richhild Moessner

We provide new insights on the formation of inflation expectations - in particular at a time of great financial and economic turmoil - by evaluating results from a survey conducted from July 2009 through July 2010. Participants in this survey answered a weekly questionnaire about their short-, medium- and long-term inflation expectations. Participants received common information sets with data relevant to euro area inflation. Our analysis of survey responses reveals several interesting results. First, our evidence is consistent with long-term expectations having remained well anchored to the ECBs definition of price stability, which acted as a focal point for long-term expectations. Second, the turmoil in euro area bond markets triggered by the Greek fiscal crisis influenced short- and medium-term inflation expectations but had only a very small impact on long-term expectations. By contrast, longterm expectations did not react to developments of the euro area wide fiscal burden. Third, participants changed their expectations fairly frequently. The longer the horizon, the less frequent but larger these changes were. Fourth, expectations exhibit a large degree of timevariant non-normality. Fifth, inflation expectations appear fairly homogenous across groups of agents at the shorter horizon but less so at the medium- and long-term horizons.


Economics Letters | 2018

Deflation Risk in the Euro Area and Central Bank Credibility

Gabriele Galati; Zion Gorgi; Richhild Moessner; Chen Zhou

This paper investigates how the perceived risk that the euro area will experience deflation has evolved over time, and what this risk implies for the credibility of the ECB. We use a novel data set on market participants’ perceptions of short- to long-term deflation risk implied by year-on-year options on forward inflation swaps. We investigate whether long-term inflation expectations have become de-anchored, by studying whether long-term deflation risk has been affected by changes in oil prices and by short-term deflation risk. Our analysis suggests that the anchoring properties of euro area inflation expectations have weakened, albeit in a still subtle way.


Social Science Research Network | 2016

Connecting the Dots: Market Reactions to Forecasts of Policy Rates and Forward Guidance Provided by the Fed

Michelle Bongard; Gabriele Galati; Richhild Moessner; William R. Nelson

This paper compares market reactions to forecasts of the policy rate path provided by FOMC participants (“dots�?) in the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) with those to forward guidance provided by the FOMC in its statements. We find that market expectations of the time to lift-off from the zero lower bound are significantly affected in the expected direction by surprises in SEP dots and in forward guidance. We also find a significant impact of macroeconomic news on market participants’ expectations of time to lift-off. These results are consistent with forward guidance about policy rates and SEP forecasts each contributing to the public’s understanding of future Federal Reserve monetary policy, and with the conditionality of both forms of communication about future policy rates being understood. We also present evidence that market expectations concerning the time to lift-off are influenced by the maximum time to lift-off implied by forward guidance, the SEP and the economic outlook. An appendix provides the FOMC’s forward guidance after each meeting from January 2012 to September 2015 and our interpretation of the implied days to lift-off.


BIS Quarterly Review | 2007

Evidence of carry trade activity

Alexandra Heath; Gabriele Galati; Patrick McGuire


Archive | 2004

Why Has FX Trading Surged? Explaining the 2004 Triennial Survey

Gabriele Galati; Michael Melvin


International Journal of Finance & Economics | 2009

The Euro as a Reserve Currency: A Challenge to the Pre-Eminence of the US Dollar?

Gabriele Galati; Philip Wooldridge


Archive | 2000

Trading Volumes, Volatility and Spreads in Foreign Exchange Markets: Evidence from Emerging Market Countries

Gabriele Galati

Collaboration


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Richhild Moessner

Bank for International Settlements

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Alexandra Heath

Reserve Bank of Australia

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Chen Zhou

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Rob Alessie

University of Groningen

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