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Author:Weiss, Colin 

Discussion Paper
Short-Term Funding Stresses and Asset Prices: Lessons from U.S. History

Recent stress episodes in U.S. short-term dollar funding markets have brought renewed attention to the functioning of these markets and how they interact with capital markets more generally. The history of U.S. money markets and stock and bond markets before the founding of the Federal Reserve offer a unique perspective on how the structure of money markets can contribute to broader asset price fluctuations.
FEDS Notes , Paper 2020-11-09-4

Working Paper
Geopolitics and the U.S. Dollar's Future as a Reserve Currency

I survey the role of geopolitics and sanctions risk in shaping the U.S. dollar's status as the primary currency used for international reserves. Without changes in the economic incentives for holding FX reserves in U.S. dollar assets, an increased threat of sanctions is unlikely to drastically reduce the dollar share of FX reserves. Currently, around three-quarters of foreign government holdings of safe U.S. assets are by countries with some military tie to the U.S. Even a reduced reliance on the U.S. dollar for trade invoicing and debt denomination by a large bloc of countries less ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 1359

Working Paper
Intermediary Asset Pricing during the National Banking Era

Financial intermediary balance sheets matter for asset returns even when these intermediaries do not directly participate in the relevant asset markets. During the National Banking Era, liquidity conditions for the New York Clearinghouse (NYCH) banks forecast excess returns for stocks, bonds, and currencies. The NYCH banks had little to no direct participation in these markets; their main link to these markets was through securities financing. Liquidity conditions affect asset prices through the credit growth of the NYCH banks, which shapes marginal investors' discount rates. I use ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 1302

Discussion Paper
Foreign Portfolio Investment When the United States was an Emerging Market

In this note, we analyze two surveys occurring in 1853 and 1869 and compare the patterns of foreign ownership then to foreign portfolio investment in the present-day United States.
FEDS Notes , Paper 2019-10-16

Discussion Paper
Foreign Demand for U.S. Treasury Securities during the Pandemic

Foreign investors hold a sizable amount of U.S. Treasury securities—$7.5 trillion or about 35 percent of the total outstanding—so net purchases by foreign investors receive significant attention from a variety of sources, including academic researchers, finance professionals, and journalists. During the pandemic, foreign demand for U.S. Treasury securities has received scrutiny for a variety of reasons, including the contribution of foreign investors to the massive selloff in March 2020 (Duffie, 2020; Vissing-Jorgensen, forthcoming) and the ability of foreign investors to absorb ...
FEDS Notes , Paper 2022-01-28

Discussion Paper
Financial Flows to the United States in 2022: Was There Fragmentation?

Events of the last five years, such as the U.S.-China trade war, the COVID-19 pandemic, and—most recently—Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, have raised concerns in the popular press and among policymakers that the international economic and financial system is at risk of becoming significantly fragmented (Aiyar et al., 2023; Ip, 2023; Shin, 2023). Most recently, attention has shifted to the possibility of fragmentation along geopolitical lines, where countries primarily trade with and invest in other countries with which they share close diplomatic and political ties (International Monetary ...
FEDS Notes , Paper 2023-08-04-1

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