
handle: 10419/152812
We model the interbank market for overnight credit with heterogeneous banks and asymmetric information. An unsophisticated bank justntrades to compensate its liquidity imbalance, while a sophisticated bank willnexploit its private information about the liquidity situation in the market. It is shown that with positive probability, the liquidity effect (Hamilton, 1997) is reversed, i.e., a liquidity drainage from the banking system may generatenan overall decrease in the market rate. The phenomenon does not disappear when the number of banks increases. We also show that private information mitigates the effect of an unexpected liquidity shock on the market rate, suggesting a conservative information policy from a central bank perspective.
Asymmetric information, ddc:330, G14, Asymmetric information, liquidity effect, monetary policy implementation, 330 Economics, 10007 Department of Economics, IEW Institute for Empirical Research in Economics (former), Liquidity effect, asymmetric information, monetary policy implementation, G21, monetary policy implementation, E52, liquidity effect, jel: jel:E52, jel: jel:G21, jel: jel:G14
Asymmetric information, ddc:330, G14, Asymmetric information, liquidity effect, monetary policy implementation, 330 Economics, 10007 Department of Economics, IEW Institute for Empirical Research in Economics (former), Liquidity effect, asymmetric information, monetary policy implementation, G21, monetary policy implementation, E52, liquidity effect, jel: jel:E52, jel: jel:G21, jel: jel:G14
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