DCM and Policy interest rate: Difference between pages

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1. ''Capital market.''
''Central banks - monetary policy - interest rates''.


Debt capital market as in "a DCM issue" or "funding from DCMs".
"The policy interest rate is an interest rate that... the central bank sets in order to influence the evolution of the main monetary variables in the economy...


The policy interest rate determines the levels of the rest of the interest rates in the economy, since it is the price at which private agents - mostly private [commercial] banks - obtain money from the central bank.


2. ''Contract market.''
These [commercial] banks will then offer financial products to their clients at an interest rate that is normally based on the policy rate."


Designated contract market (under the US Commodity Exchange Act (CEA)).


''Source: Focus Economics webpage. June 2020''


==See also==
* [[Bank finance]]
* [[Capital market]]
* [[Debt capital market]]
* [[Designated contract market]]
* [[Equity capital market]]


[[Category:Corporate_financial_management]]
Examples include the US Fed funds rate, the European Central Bank's interest rate on its main refinancing operations, and the UK's Official Bank Rate.
[[Category:Financial_risk_management]]
 
 
== See also ==
* [[Central bank]]
* [[Committee on the Global Financial System]]
* [[Effective lower bound]]
* [[European Central Bank]]
* [[Fed funds]]
* [[Forward guidance]]
* [[Global Financial Crisis]]
* [[Interest rate]]
* [[Lending operations]]
* [[Main refinancing operations]]
* [[Margin compression]]
* [[Negative interest rate policies]]
* [[Neutral interest rate]]
* [[Non-performing loan]]
* [[Official Bank Rate]]
* [[Quantitative easing ]]
* [[Reserve requirements]]
* [[Sterling Monetary Framework]]
* [[Supply side policy]]
* [[Unconventional monetary policy]]
* [[Zero lower bound]]
* [[ZLB problem]]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Cash_management]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]
[[Category:Liquidity_management]]

Latest revision as of 21:52, 8 June 2020

Central banks - monetary policy - interest rates.

"The policy interest rate is an interest rate that... the central bank sets in order to influence the evolution of the main monetary variables in the economy...

The policy interest rate determines the levels of the rest of the interest rates in the economy, since it is the price at which private agents - mostly private [commercial] banks - obtain money from the central bank.

These [commercial] banks will then offer financial products to their clients at an interest rate that is normally based on the policy rate."


Source: Focus Economics webpage. June 2020


Examples include the US Fed funds rate, the European Central Bank's interest rate on its main refinancing operations, and the UK's Official Bank Rate.


See also