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Institute of Business and Economic Research
Coleman Fung Risk Management Research Center
University of California, Berkeley

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The Interest Rate Conundrum
Roger Craine, University of California, Berkeley
Vance L. Martin, University of Melbourne

Download the Paper (628 K, PDF file) - August 1, 2009 Tell a colleague about it.
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ABSTRACT:
In June of 2004 the Fed began relentlessly tightening policy. They raised the Federal Funds Target (Target) from 1% to 5 1/4% in 1/4% increments at seventeen consecutive meetings. While short rates dutifully followed the Target up, long maturity rates actually fell. Alan Greenspan in 2005 Congressional testimony labeled the strange behavior of the spread between long rates and the Target a "conundrum". This paper examines the conundrum. We present robust empirical evidence that the increase in foreign holdings of US Treasury bonds explains more than half of the decline in long maturity rates. Foreign holdings of US Treasury debt with a maturity over one year grew from 20% in 1994 to 57% in 2007.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Roger Craine and Vance L. Martin, "The Interest Rate Conundrum" (August 1, 2009). Coleman Fung Risk Management Research Center. Paper CFRMRC07-009.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/iber/cfrmrc/CFRMRC07-009

 
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