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Finance: What are open market operations? 1 Views
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Description:
Open market operations are government actions that affect the price of renting money.
- Social Studies / Finance
- Finance / Financial Responsibility
- College and Career / Personal Finance
- Life Skills / Personal Finance
- Finance / Finance Definitions
- Life Skills / Finance Definitions
- Finance / Personal Finance
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- Subjects / Finance and Economics
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- Terms and Concepts / Econ
Transcript
- 00:00
finance a la shmoop what are open market operations om o--'s are kind of the
- 00:08
financial Navy SEALs affecting economic world peace in the daily wrestling match [Navy SEALs in a line]
- 00:13
between inflation and interest rates and the global appetite for credit risk will [boxing match]
- 00:18
the open market operations are active actual things that the government does
- 00:23
to affect the price of renting money and/or the ability of Joe Sixpack and
Full Transcript
- 00:28
corporate America to rent that money well specifically there exists a group
- 00:32
of well seven plus angry people who run the reserve Open Committee which buys [angry people in an office meeting]
- 00:37
and sells government securities namely tea bills notes and bonds in order to
- 00:41
regulate and control the supply of money to well basically well-heeled investors
- 00:47
yes hello China thanks for buying so much so how does this work well in any
- 00:51
given month the US government transacts in hundreds of billions of dollars of
- 00:55
debt instruments gas tea bills notes and bonds and all that stuff yeah that's all [notes and bonds on a table]
- 01:00
those guys either as a buyer of them or a seller of them sounds like a very [Uncle Sam buying or selling bonds]
- 01:04
strange process in that paper is paper right and a t-bill can be liquidly
- 01:09
converted into cash right so you'd think that the government simply borrowing [bond put in a blender and turns into dollar bills]
- 01:14
from Peter to pay Paul and then doing the reverse what really wouldn't matter
- 01:18
at all or at least certainly matter that much to interest rates and the liquidity
- 01:22
and the overall health of our multi trillion dollar economy right but maybe
- 01:26
surprisingly it actually has a huge effect mainly because that last 2% of
- 01:31
people needing cash or wanting to invest cash are transacting in the market while
- 01:37
the remaining 98% or so of the world well he just kind of sits there happy
- 01:40
with the poker hand that they've been dealt cash wise at least this month
- 01:44
relatively small percentage changes of the total like quote only a few hundred
- 01:49
billion dollars unquote actually have a dramatic effect on liquidity in the
- 01:53
marketplace think about it like the one guy on the freeway who has to drive in
- 01:58
the middle lane going 42 miles an hour and well then everyone else backs up [guy driving slowly on freeway]
- 02:03
it's a kind of so when the government wants to increase
- 02:06
the supply of money or cash or liquidity so that borrowers have an easier time
- 02:11
getting banks or other lending institutions like savings and loans to
- 02:15
loan them money while the government then buys securities or said another way
- 02:19
the government takes its cash stash and spreads it around to buy things back
- 02:24
like tea bills notes in the various flavors of bonds right so that's
- 02:28
government cash then going out into the marketplace so Joe Sixpack can stare at [piles on money in a bakery window]
- 02:32
it hungrily and the opposite works the same way when the government wants to
- 02:35
restrict the supply of cash like maybe it's worried about inflation or an
- 02:39
overheated borrowing economy like we have too much leverage out there well it
- 02:43
then sells a bunch of debt instruments soaking up like a financial sponge the
- 02:49
excess cash in the marketplace and replacing it with lovely pieces of paper
- 02:53
with a big fat IOU on the cover right that's a t-bill so this is the
- 02:57
playing field in which open market operations happen and specifically when [baseball breaks screen]
- 03:01
the Fed buys securities it usually buys them from banks injecting loads of cash
- 03:06
into the bank who then feels pressure to get that cash money loaned out through
- 03:11
little and big business and joke consumer alike think about it like dole
- 03:14
pineapple has just injected 18 million pineapples at a really cheap price into [pineapples dumbed into street]
- 03:20
the chain of Safeway stores well safe way is the retailer of the pineapples
- 03:24
obtained wholesale from Dole in the same way the cash was obtained by banks
- 03:29
wholesale from the government so now there's a big fat pressure to get those
- 03:33
pineapples sold before they rot or at least create a drag on earnings or [pineapples on store shelf]
- 03:38
inventory turnover ratios that grocery stores and banks care so much about well
- 03:43
with more access to capital and more liquid availability of cash banks often
- 03:47
create their own equivalent of Macy's white-flowered a sales where some lucky
- 03:52
borrower gets their money at demel 3.7 1/2 percent instead of three point nine
- 03:57
nine eight percent and those twenty eight ish basis points add up to a small
- 04:01
fortune over time and in case you're wondering the same is true in Reverse [money entering and leaving vault]
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