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The liquidity mechanics of dealer banks in the market-based credit system

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Abstract Are US government bonds (Treasuries) as good as cash? Conventional wisdom in academia and industry says that their safety and liquidity make Treasuries a cash-substitute. This paper shows that… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Are US government bonds (Treasuries) as good as cash? Conventional wisdom in academia and industry says that their safety and liquidity make Treasuries a cash-substitute. This paper shows that Treasuries stop being as good as cash when dealer banks face excessive liquidity risk. Using data from US money markets from July 2001 - Feb 2018, I use regression analyses to examine how the liquidity risk in Treasuries and in money and bond markets more generally depends on the health of market-makers, specifically, dealer banks. I find that market-making exposes dealer banks themselves to liquidity risk, which depends on the quality of collateral in dealers’ short-term credit operations. Dealer banks’ own liquidity risk is an important driver of liquidity risk in Treasuries and more broadly in money and bond markets. As a rationale for the results, I develop a mechanism how dealers manufacture liquidity in the market-based credit system.

Keywords: liquidity; dealer banks; market; liquidity risk; mechanics

Journal Title: Economic Modelling
Year Published: 2021

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