Publication | Closed Access
International Transmission of U.S. Monetary Policy Shocks: Evidence from Stock Prices
98
Citations
38
References
2010
Year
International EconomicsEconomic FluctuationMonetary PolicyExternal ShockInternational FinanceU.s. PolicyU.s. FirmsEconomicsStock PricesU.s. Monetary PolicyBond MarketInternational TransmissionInternational Monetary EconomicsFinanceMacro FinanceFinancial EconomicsMacroeconomicsShock (Economics)Exchange Rate MovementBusinessForeign Exchange Market
This paper analyzes intraday changes in firm‐level equity prices around interest rate announcements to assess the transmission of U.S. monetary policy to the global economy. We document that foreign firms on average are roughly as sensitive to U.S. monetary policy as U.S. firms, although we also find considerable cross‐sectional variation across firms. In particular, foreign stocks in cyclically sensitive industries show stronger responses to interest rate surprises, consistent with a demand channel of policy transmission. In addition, transmission of U.S. policy appears to be stronger to economies with fixed exchange rates. Evidence for a credit channel is weaker.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1