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Forecasting Interest Rates
Forecasting interest rates is a time-honored profession. Financial economists are hired (sometimes at very high
salaries) to forecast interest rates because businesses need to know what the rates will be in order to plan their
future spending, and banks and investors require interest-rate forecasts in order to decide which assets to buy.
Interest-rate forecasters predict what will happen to the factors that affect the supply and demand for bonds
and for money—factors such as the strength of the economy, the profitability of investment opportunities, the
expected inflation rate, and the size of government budget deficits and borrowing. They then use the supply-
and-demand analysis we have outlined in this chapter to come up with their interest-rate forecasts.
The
Wall Street Journal reports interest-rate forecasts by leading prognosticators twice a year (early January
and July) on its Web site. Forecasting interest rates is a perilous business. To their embarrassment, even the top
experts are frequently far off in their forecasts.
You can access the interest-rate forecasts at the URL noted below.* In addition to displaying interest-rate
forecast you can see what the leading economists predict for GDP, inflation, unemployment, and housing.
* Go to the book’s Web site
www.pearsonhighered.com/mishkin_eakins
for the most current URL.
F O L L O W I N G T H E F I N A N C I A L N E W S
bonds for the asset account because, as we have seen in Chapter 3, the drop in inter-
est rates will produce large capital gains. Conversely, if forecasts say that interest rates
are likely to rise in the future, the manager will prefer to hold short-term bonds or
loans in the portfolio in order to avoid potential capital losses on long-term securities.
Forecasts of interest rates also help managers decide whether to borrow long-
term or short-term. If interest rates are forecast to rise in the future, the financial
institution manager will want to lock in the low interest rates by borrowing long-term;
if the forecasts say that interest rates will fall, the manager will seek to borrow short-
term in order to take advantage of low interest-rate costs in the future.
Clearly, good forecasts of future interest rates are extremely valuable to the finan-
cial institution manager, who, not surprisingly, would be willing to pay a lot for accu-
rate forecasts. Unfortunately, interest-rate forecasting is a perilous business, and even
the top forecasters, to their embarrassment, are frequently far off in their forecasts.
S U M M A R Y
1. The quantity demanded of an asset is (a) positively
related to wealth, (b) positively related to the
expected return on the asset relative to alternative
assets, (c) negatively related to the riskiness of the
asset relative to alternative assets, and (d) positively
related to the liquidity of the asset relative to alter-
native assets.
2. Diversification (the holding of more than one asset)
benefits investors because it reduces the risk they
face, and the benefits are greater the less returns on
securities move together.
3. The supply-and-demand analysis for bonds provides
a theory of how interest rates are determined. It pre-
dicts that interest rates will change when there is a
change in demand because of changes in income (or
wealth), expected returns, risk, or liquidity, or when
there is a change in supply because of changes in the
attractiveness of investment opportunities, the real
cost of borrowing, or government activities.
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