Federal Reserve

IFDP Paper: The case for supporting liquidity supply in (some corners of) non-bank intermediation

Sirio AramonteAfter the Global Financial Crisis, the liquidity-supply ecosystem that underpins nonbank intermediation shifted away from traditional dealers. Instead, it started to rely more on intermediaries with fragile funding structures and opportunistic investment strategies. Over the years, stress episodes saw the sudden retrenchment of these intermediaries, which amplified liquidity imbalances and market malfunction.

IFDP Paper: Retail inventories and inflation dynamics: The price margin channel

Neil Mehrotra, Hyunseung Oh, and Julio L. OrtizUsing industry-level panel data and plausibly exogenous variation in supply conditions, we estimate the elasticity of retail price margins with respect to inventories along the retailer's optimal pricing curve. We find that this elasticity is negative and statistically significant, implying that lower finished-good inventories lead to higher price margins.

FEDS Paper: Decomposing Recent Employment Gains Among Disabled Workers

Hsinyu (Samuel) Tseng, Douglas A. WebberWe use the longitudinal component of the Current Population Survey to compare transition rates into and out of disability and employment prior to and after the onset of the pandemic. We find that one-third of the increased employment rate among disabled people is due to the excess incidence of disability seen following the pandemic, while the other two-thirds is attributable to higher participation among people whose disabilities were unrelated to the pandemic.

FEDS Paper: Illiquid Homeownership and the Bank of Mom and Dad

Eirik Eylands BrandsaasHousing is the largest asset in U.S. household portfolios, and first-time homebuyers increasingly rely on parental transfers. This paper quantifies the contribution of parental transfers to the homeownership rate of young households. I build and estimate a life-cycle overlapping generations model with housing, where adult children and parents interact without commitment. I find that parental transfers account for 13 percentage points (27%) of young households' homeownership.

FEDS Paper: “Harvest Now Decrypt Later”: Examining Post-Quantum Cryptography and the Data Privacy Risks for Distributed Ledger Networks

Jillian Mascelli and Megan RoddenThis paper analyzes the risks posed by future-state quantum computers, specifically the “harvest now decrypt later” (HNDL) risk. We review foundational concepts of quantum computing to address the present and ongoing threat of HNDL to currently protected data. We use the Bitcoin network as an illustrative example to study the implications of HNDL for distributed ledger cryptocurrency networks that rely upon traditional cryptography.

FEDS Paper: Can LLMs Improve Sanctions Screening in the Financial System? Evidence from a Fuzzy Matching Assessment

Jeffrey S. Allen and Max S. S. HatfieldWe examined the performance of four families of large language models (LLMs) and a variety of common fuzzy matching algorithms in assessing the similarity of names and addresses in a sanctions screening context. On average, across a range of realistic matching thresholds, the LLMs in our study reduced sanctions screening false positives by 92 percent and increased detection rates by 11 percent relative to the best-performing fuzzy matching baseline.

FEDS Paper: Parallel Trends Forest: Data-Driven Control Sample Selection in Difference-in-Differences

Yesol Huh and Matthew Vanderpool KlingThis paper introduces parallel trends forest, a novel approach to constructing optimal control samples when using difference-in-differences (DiD) in a relatively long panel data with little randomization in treatment assignment. Our method uses machine learning techniques to construct an optimal control sample that best meet the parallel trends assumption. We demonstrate that our approach outperforms existing methods, particularly with noisy, granular data.

FEDS Paper: Financial Stability Implications of Generative AI: Taming the Animal Spirits

Anne Lundgaard Hansen and Seung Jung LeeThis paper investigates the impact of the adoption of generative AI on financial stability. We conduct laboratory-style experiments using large language models to replicate classic studies on herd behavior in investment decisions. Our results show that AI agents make more rational decisions than humans, relying predominantly on private information over market trends.

IFDP Paper: Imperfect Information and Slow Recoveries in the Labor Market

Anushka MitraThe unemployment rate remains elevated long after recessions, a persistence that standard search-and-matching models cannot explain. I show that noise shocks—expectational errors due to the noise in received signals about aggregate shocks—account for much of this sluggishness. Using a structural VAR, I find that absent noise shocks unemployment would have recovered to its pre-recession level six quarters earlier over 1968–2019.

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