Walker Ray

About: 

Assistant Professor, London School of Economics, Department of Finance

Research Affiliate, Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR)

Curriculum Vitae: CV

Fields:

Macroeconomics, International Finance

Contact:

w.d.ray@lse.ac.uk

Research

Published and Accepted Papers

Unbundling Quantitative Easing: Taking a Cue from Treasury Auctions (with Michael Droste and Yuriy Gorodnichenko), (accepted for publication, Journal of Political Economy)

We study empirically and theoretically the role of preferred habitat in understanding the economic effects of the Federal Reserve's quantitative easing (QE) programs. Using high-frequency identification and exploiting the structure of the primary market for U.S. Treasuries, we isolate demand shocks that are transmitted solely through preferred habitat channels, but otherwise mimic QE shocks. We document large "localized" yield curve effects when financial markets are disrupted. Our calibrated model, which embeds a preferred habitat model in a New Keynesian framework, can largely account for the observed financial effects of QE. We find that QE is modestly stimulative for output and inflation, but alternative policy designs can generate stronger effects.


Working Papers

A Preferred-Habitat Model of Term Premia, Exchange Rates, and Monetary Policy Spillovers (with Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas and Dimitri Vayanos), (R&R, American Economic Review)

We develop a two-country model in which currency and bond markets are populated by different investor clienteles, and segmentation is partly overcome by global arbitrageurs with limited capital. Our model accounts for the empirically documented violations of Uncovered Interest Parity (UIP) and the Expectations Hypothesis, and for how UIP violations depend on bond maturity, investment horizon, and yield curve slope differentials. Large-scale purchases of long-maturity bonds lower domestic and foreign bond yields, and depreciate the currency. Conventional monetary policy is transmitted to domestic and international bond yields as well, but its international transmission is weaker than for unconventional policy.


Polarized Expectations, Polarized Consumption (with Rupal Kamdar)

This paper argues that political affiliation plays a central role in shaping household expectations and consumption behavior. Using survey and consumption data of U.S. households, we document five facts. First, household beliefs are well-described by a single factor "sentiment" model, with nearly identical factor structures regardless of political affiliation. Second, sentiment is highly persistent, with one exception: following changes in the White House, "optimists" become "pessimists" (and vice versa). Third, at any given time there is wide dispersion in sentiment across households, which is increasingly driven by political affiliation. Fourth, households have become more likely to justify their economic beliefs using partisan narratives; but outside of elections, the pass-through to sentiment is stable over time. Fifth, consumption responds differentially along party lines following changes in the White House. Standard theories of expectation formation struggle to simultaneously rationalize these facts.


Monetary Policy and the Limits to Arbitrage: Insights from a New Keynesian Preferred Habitat Model

With conventional monetary policy unable to stabilize the economy in the wake of the global financial crisis, central banks turned to unconventional tools. This paper embeds a model of the term structure of interest rates featuring market segmentation and limits to arbitrage within a New Keynesian model to study these policies. Because the transmission of monetary policy depends on private agents with limited risk-bearing capacity, financial market disruptions reduce the efficacy of both conventional policy as well as forward guidance. Conversely, financial crises are precisely when large scale asset purchases are most effective. Policymakers can take advantage of the inability of financial markets to fully absorb these purchases, which can push down long-term interest rates and help stabilize output and inflation.


Work-in-Progress

We Think That They Think: Political Affiliation and Higher-Order Beliefs (with Rupal Kamdar) [slides] 

Surveys consistently show large heterogeneity of macroeconomic beliefs across consumers. However, very little empirical work has been done to measure higher-order beliefs. Moreover, existing studies find that agents' own and higher-order beliefs are nearly identical. In this paper, we conduct a novel survey soliciting inflation and unemployment forecasts of US consumers. Crucially, we ask respondents to report higher-order beliefs specifically of different politically affiliated consumers (Republican, Democrat, or Independent). In this context, we find that higher-order beliefs differ substantially from own beliefs. Quantitatively, consumers correctly understand the "partisan gap" in inflation and unemployment forecasts. Providing consumers information from partisan news sources tends to move higher-order beliefs of consumers of the opposite partisan affiliation. Our results suggest that "group identity" is an important driver of own and higher-order beliefs, and provide a puzzle for noisy information models.


Optimal Macro-Financial Stabilization in a New Keynesian Preferred Habitat Model (with Rupal Kamdar) [slides]

We develop a general equilibrium model featuring heterogeneous households, nominal rigidities, and limits to arbitrage due to segmentation in long-term bond markets. While conventional policy alone can stabilize aggregate fluctuations, the presence of market segmentation implies that such a policy leads to excessively volatile term premia in long-term yields, imperfect risk sharing, consumption dispersion, and welfare losses. When the central bank has access to balance sheet tools, we derive a separation principle for optimal policy: conventional policy stabilizes the output gap while balance sheet policy stabilizes term premia. Only when the short rate is constrained should balance sheet policy be used for macroeconomic stabilization, but this comes at the cost of imperfect financial stabilization. Thus, optimal policy may appear, at times, to be working against itself; our model implies that in the current period of high inflation, some central banks may wish to hike policy rates more aggressively while simultaneously expanding the balance sheet.


The Effects of News Shocks and Supply-Side Beliefs (with Rupal Kamdar) [slides]

This paper investigates the causes and consequences of "supply-side beliefs" - the tendency for households to overweight the importance of aggregate supply shocks relative to demand-side factors. We develop a New Keynesian model where agents receive news about future supply and demand shocks. Because supply shocks are more costly, potential model misspecification causes agents to endogenously downweight the likelihood that news is informative about demand shocks. The model rationalizes a number of empirical puzzles, such as the observed positive correlation between survey-based inflation and unemployment expectations, and the instability of estimated Phillips curve slope coefficients. Next, we empirically test a key prediction of the model: news shocks cause realized inflation and unemployment to move in the same direction. Using daily survey-based inflation expectations around CPI releases, we construct a novel measure of news-driven inflation expectation shocks. Consistent with the model, following an increase in our inflation expectation measure, both realized inflation and unemployment rise. These results are robust across a wide range of specifications and sample periods; quantitatively, we find that a one percentage point shock to inflation expectations boosts inflation by roughly 0.1% and unemployment by 0.2% over the next 2 years.


Dividend Habitats (with Cameron Peng and Dimitri Vayanos)