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Central bank tone and the dispersion of views within monetary policy committees

Paul Hubert and Fabien Labondance

No 2019-08, Working Papers from CRESE

Abstract: Does policymakers’ choice of words matter? We explore empirically whether central bank tone conveyed in FOMC statements contains useful information for financial market participants. We quantify central bank tone using computational linguistics and identify exogenous shocks to central bank tone orthogonal to the state of the economy. Using an ARCH model and a high-frequency approach, we find that positive central bank tone increases interest rates at the 1-year maturity. We therefore investigate which potential pieces of information could be revealed by central bank tone. Our tests suggest that it relates to the dispersion of views among FOMC members. This information may be useful to financial markets to understand current and future policy decisions. Finally, we show that central bank tone helps predicting future policy decisions.

Pages: 39 pages
Date: 2019-11
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-big, nep-cba, nep-cmp, nep-mac and nep-mon
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)

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Related works:
Working Paper: Central Bank Tone and the Dispersion of Views within Monetary Policy Committees (2020) Downloads
Working Paper: Central Bank Tone and the Dispersion of Views within Monetary Policy Committees (2020) Downloads
Working Paper: Central Bank Tone and the Dispersion of Views within Monetary Policy Committees (2020) Downloads
Working Paper: Central bank tone and the dispersion of views within monetary policy committees (2019) Downloads
Working Paper: Central bank tone and the dispersion of views within monetary policy committees (2019) Downloads
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