您现在的位置是:Fxscam News > Exchange Dealers
Challenges and Responses to ECB's Shift: From Interest Rate Corridor to Floor System
Fxscam News2025-07-22 07:50:32【Exchange Dealers】5人已围观
简介Foreign exchange point calculation,Gift arbitrage,Before the global financial crisis of 2008, the European Central Bank (ECB) operated a monetary poli

Before the global financial crisis of 2008, the European Central Bank (ECB) operated a monetary policy framework known as the interest rate corridor model. This model managed short-term market rates by setting an upper limit (Marginal Lending Facility Rate, MLFR) and a lower limit (Deposit Facility Rate, DFR). The main refinancing rate was positioned in the middle of this corridor. The ECB guided short-term market rates to align with the main refinancing rate through open market operations. In this framework, the banking system reserves were kept at lower levels, enabling the ECB to effectively control interest rates and liquidity conditions, ensuring the smooth transmission of monetary policy to the real economy.
However, the outbreak of the global financial crisis in 2008 altered the macro-financial environment, leading to difficulties in monetary policy transmission. The U.S. subprime mortgage crisis triggered global liquidity stress, restricting banks' asset liquidation and liquidity management capabilities, with banks gradually leaning on the ECB as a liquidity source. Concurrently, short-term rates in the euro area became volatile, market confidence in the ECB's control waned, sovereign debt rates in peripheral countries continuously increased, and financial conditions tightened further.
To address these challenges, the ECB implemented quantitative easing after the financial crisis, shifting its monetary policy framework from the interest rate corridor model to a "floor system." Under this system, the ECB met banks' liquidity needs at a fixed refinancing rate without limit and expanded the list of eligible collateral to increase market liquidity supply. To provide more long-term, stable liquidity, the ECB introduced one-year and three-year Long-Term Refinancing Operations. Additionally, the ECB launched the Covered Bond Purchase Programme (CBPP) and the Securities Markets Programme (SMP), purchasing bonds from primary and secondary markets to help banks restore long-term financing functions and reduce the risk premium on member states' sovereign debt.
These measures successfully helped the ECB regain control over short-term interest rates and stabilized market spreads. However, the "floor system" also brought new challenges. Firstly, the reduction of policy rates to match the corridor's lower limit blurred the lines between fiscal policy and monetary policy, raising concerns over fiscal deficit monetization. Secondly, the ECB's large-scale bond purchases reduced the number of bonds available for trading in the market, creating a scarcity of high-quality collateral. Quantitative easing also depressed bond yields, possibly altering market risk pricing and the allocation of financial resources, affecting bond market liquidity. Lastly, excess liquidity reduced interbank unsecured money market activity, making bank reserve needs unstable, and increasing sensitivity to the relative returns of banks' investments in other products.
Overall, while the ECB's transformation of its monetary policy framework effectively addressed the post-global financial crisis liquidity crisis, it also exposed potential risks in policy transmission, bond markets, and bank trading behavior. In the future, the ECB will need to continue adjusting its strategies to tackle possible economic uncertainties and financial market fluctuations.

The market carries risks, and investment should be cautious. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and has not taken into account individual users' specific investment goals, financial situations, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, viewpoints, or conclusions in this article are suitable for their particular circumstances. Investing based on this is at one's own responsibility.
很赞哦!(7535)
相关文章
- Country Garden's stock price hits a historical low, sparking concerns over restructuring.
- Silver rises as market focus shifts to tariffs and economic data.
- Tight supply drives U.S. gasoline prices to a yearly high.
- The EU is expected to achieve its winter natural gas storage target ahead of schedule.
- GetPhyco Club: Rootie Technology's Ponzi Scheme Tool
- The European Central Bank is concerned about the instability in the inflation outlook.
- Japan’s recovery gains momentum, but the yen stays weak amid persistent global economic pressures
- The Reserve Bank of Australia faces its first consecutive rate cuts in six years.
- SARACEN INC Review: High Risk (Illegal Business)
- Vale is optimistic about China's demand for iron ore and steel.
热门文章
站长推荐
CXM Trading Evaluation: High Risk (Suspected Scam)
U.S. Treasuries lose appeal as foreign investors may shift to domestic bond markets.
Euro surge sparks short squeeze as Goldman and Morgan Stanley turn bearish on the dollar
Trump's pressure on the Fed weakened the dollar, while trade tensions caused the yuan to fall.
FxPro Important Notice: Trading Hours Update During Catholic Easter Holiday
The appreciation of the euro raises concerns for the European Central Bank.
Domestic production constraints drive an increase in China's power coal imports.
Oil prices plummet, Brent crude holds firm at the $90 mark.