William C. Whitesell
Federal Reserve System
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Publication
Featured researches published by William C. Whitesell.
Journal of Money, Credit and Banking | 2003
Joe Lange; Brian P. Sack; William C. Whitesell
In recent years, financial markets appear better able to anticipate FOMC policy changes. Beginning in the late 1980s and early 1990s, longer-term interest rates and futures rates have tended to incorporate movements in the federal funds rate several months in advance, in contrast to the largely contemporaneous response typically observed before that time. After identifying these emerging trends, the paper parses the enhanced predictability into a component that can be attributed to the autoregressive behavior of the funds rate and a non-autoregressive component. The paper considers institutional developments in FOMC policy making that may have contributed to each of these components, including gradualism in adjusting the federal funds rate target and transparency regarding the setting of the target and future policy intentions.
Journal of Money, Credit and Banking | 1992
William C. Whitesell
This paper develops a model of bank deposit pricing with optimal consumer choices of spending shares among alternative media of exchange. Interpreting deposits as a tie-in feature of the sale of bank payment services, the paper shows that the wedge between consumer and social costs of currency use may reverse typical prescriptions regarding bank market structure and distortionary taxes on banks. An explanation is offered for below-cost bank service fees, despite deregulated deposit interest rates, while rate ceilings are shown to induce substitution into payment media with higher social costs. Copyright 1992 by Ohio State University Press.
Journal of Economics and Business | 2006
Selva Demiralp; Brian Preslopsky; William C. Whitesell
This paper investigates transactions and interest rates on brokered and direct trades in federal funds, Euro-dollar transactions, and repurchase agreements, all of which are used by banks in overnight funding. We expand on earlier work on calendar-day effects in these markets, investigating also volumes of funding in recent years. Our data include daily trades in federal funds reported by major brokers and also records of uncollateralized transactions over the wire transfer system operated by the Federal Reserve. We find that the share of the overnight interbank loan market represented by brokered fed funds has decreased and is now only about one-third of the total. We also show evidence of close but incomplete arbitrage among the major segments of the overnight interbank market, though the specific calendar-day patterns of spreads and volatilities have evolved relative to the literature using earlier sample periods.
Social Science Research Network | 2006
William C. Whitesell
Most central banks now implement monetary policy by trying to hit a target overnight interest rate using one of two types of frameworks. The first involves arrangements for depository institutions to hold a minimum account balance over a multi-day averaging period. The second uses the central banks lending rate as a ceiling and its deposit rate as a floor for overnight interest rates. Either averaging or a rate corridor can help a central bank hit a target interest rate, but each framework can also have weaknesses in achieving that goal and, in some cases, other associated drawbacks. This paper discusses an alternative possible policy implementation regime, involving a specially designed facility for the payment of interest on a daily basis on balances held at the central bank. This new type of regime could potentially allow smooth monetary policy implementation without the problems associated with averaging or a rate corridor.
Social Science Research Network | 2005
William C. Whitesell
Most inflation-targeting central banks express their inflation objective in terms of a range for a single official inflation measure but generally have not clarified the meaning of the ranges and their implications for policy responses. In formulating policy, all central banks monitor multiple inflation indicators. This paper suggests an alternative approach to communicating an inflation goal: announcing point-values, rather than ranges, for a few key reference measures of inflation that are used in making policy. After reviewing and extending relevant theoretical and empirical studies, the paper argues that the alternative approach could more accurately reflect the concerns of policymakers and provide a better accountability structure for monetary policy performance.
Journal of Monetary Economics | 2006
William C. Whitesell
Journal of Money, Credit and Banking | 1989
William C. Whitesell
Social Science Research Network | 2001
Egon Zakrajsek; Seth B. Carpenter; William C. Whitesell
Social Science Research Network | 2001
Joe Lange; Brian P. Sack; William C. Whitesell
Social Science Research Network | 1995
William C. Whitesell; Sean Collins