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Macro-Finance Summary – KU Leuven,

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This document contains a comprehensive summary of the Macro-Finance course at KU Leuven for the academic year 2024. It covers all lecture topics from the financial system, monetary policy, asset pricing models, and the yield curve, to macroeconomic aggregate models. Includes detailed theoretical explanations, formulas, and graphical interpretations. Useful for exam preparation and gaining a structured understanding of macro-financial concepts.

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Summary Macro-Finance
Lecture 0: Introduction
1. Tyler expansions

1 j
f ( x )=∑
j
f (a)(x−a)
j=0 j!

2. Convergent series (savings)
∞ ∞ ∞

∑ (1+S y) j =S ∑ (1+1 y) j =S ∑ β j=S 1−β
1
j=0 j=0 j=0



1
with β=
1+ y


[ ( ) ]
N +1
1+ y 1
TS=S 1−
y 1+ y


Lecture 1: The financial system principles
and relevance
1. The financial system: 6 parts
a. Money: means of exchange (as legal tender), unit of account & store of value

b. Financial instruments:
 transfer of resources from savers to investors
 transfer of risk to risk-absorbers

c. Financial markets: platform for buying and selling financial instruments efficiently

d. Financial institutions: proving large scale of financial services, including access to financial
market and information collection

e. Government regulatory agencies: supervising and regulating the financial system in order
to make it safe and reliable

f. Central Banks: monetary policy, monitor and stabilize the economy (and in some case also
directly) the financial system




1

,2. The financial system: 5 core principles
a. Core principle 1: time has value and is rewarded in financial pricing through the (risk-free)
interest rate. Interest rates form the key determinant of pricing risk-free cash-flows or
projects.

b. Core principle 2: risk-taking requires compensation in the form of pecuniary payments.
And this compensation increases with the amount of risk taken and the market price of
risk. fundamental pricing equation:r i , t +1=¿ r f ,t + rpi , t +ε i ,t +1
Pi , t+ 1 D i ,t → t +1
r i , t+1 = +
Pi ,t P i ,t
c. Core principle 3: Information is a key variable underlying financial decision with the role of
information becoming more relevant as decisions increase in importance.

d. Core principle 4: financial markets “determine” financial prices and allocate resources
throughout the economy
i. Pricing fundamental assets:
 Risk-free bonds
 Market-wide prices of risk
ii. Financial prices = information variables
iii. Derivative financial assets prices using no-arbitrage on basis of prices of
fundamental assets
iv. Proper market functioning should be safeguarded by regulatory & supervisory
authorities
v. Digression: fundamental asset pricing
 Market equilibrium
 Example with simple linear demand functions
 Example prediction markets
 Yield curve inversion: indicator for an upcoming recession
 Examples of information aggregation in financial pricing

e. Core principle 5: financial stability improves welfare
i. Financial markets: intrinsically unstable (market faillures)
ii. Maintaining financial stability requires intervention of prudential authorities
iii. Risk diversification allows to eliminate non-priced risks at individual level, but
cannot eliminate macro-financial risk
iv. Financial stability: the welfare cost of crises (persistent loss in GDP)




2

, 3. The crucial role of the financial sector
a. Reason 1: Desynchronization through time between consumption (investment) and
income streams  max U ( C 1 )+ δE [ U (C2 ) ]
C 1 ,C 2

i. Graphical




ii. Case A: no financial markets implying you consume what you produce
 C 1 ≤ Y 1∧C 2 ≤ Y 2
 Solution: E ( U )=U ( Y 1) + δE [ U ( C2 ) ]
iii. Case B: financial markets exist that allows to save and invest (B) in period 1 and
liquidate in period 2 at a rate of r
 C 1 ≤ Y 1−B∧C 2 ≤ Y 2 + ( 1+ r ) B
 Solution: U ' ( Y 1−B )=δ ( 1+r ) E [ U ' (Y 2+ ( 1+ r ) B) ]
 Mathematical proof of finding optimal B
−( ( 1+r ) δ)−1 / γ Y 2−Y 1
B¿ = ¿¿

b. Reason 2: Decoupling (partly) of consumption (investment) from risky income streams
(risk) max E [ U (C 2) ]= pr a U ( C 2 ,a ) +¿ pr b U ( C2 , b ) ¿
C 2 ,b ,C 2, a

i. Graphical




ii. Case A: no financial market
iii. Case B: insurance contract  welfare improving

c. Reason 3: Efficient allocation of resources in an economy depends on efficient sourcing of
savings and allocation of investments in an economy

4. Why financial intermediation is not a free lunch?
a. Excessive volatility due to procyclical nature of financial sector generated by financial
accelerator and procyclical provisioning

b. Too much (too asymmetric) finance?

3
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