Publication:
Notes from the Vault
2009-2020
- 2000s
- 2010s
- Excess Reserves in the 1930s : A Precautionary Tale
- Too Big to Fail
- Financial Speculation in Credit Default Swaps
- Too Big to Fail : No Simple Solutions
- Bailouts
- The Financial System after the Crisis : Structured Finance and Credit Rating Agencies
- The Financial System after the Crisis : Policy Fallout
- A Global Financial Crisis?
- Credit Default Swaps on Government Debt : Mindless Speculation?
- Private Deleveraging and Large Government Deficits
- The Economics of Regulating Systemic Risk
- International Dimensions of the Financial Crisis of 2007 and 2008
- Municipal Bond Woes
- Economic Effects of Banking Crises : A Bit of Evidence from Iceland and Ireland
- Capital at Banks
- Three Individually Reasonable Decisions, One Unintended Consequence, and a Solution
- Credit Ratings and the U.S. Downgrade
- The Financial Crisis and Recovery : Why so Slow?
- Sovereign Debt and Default
- The TARGET2 Settlement System in the Eurozone
- Will Taxpayers Get a Truly Fair Deal with Housing Finance Reform?
- Reflections on the 2013 Financial Markets Conference
- Lessons from the Housing GSEs for Resolving Too Big to Fail
- Value at Risk : A Valuable Tool That Was Greatly Oversold
- Reducing Systemic Risk or Merely Transforming It?
- FASB Proposes (Too?) Early Loan Loss Recognition
- SIFI Failure versus Financial System Failure
- Supervising Bank Compensation Policies
- Basel III and Stress Tests
- Simple Concept, Complex Regulation
- Two Drivers of Financial Innovation
- Have the Government-Sponsored Enterprises Fully Repaid the Treasury?
- Better but Still Imperfect Financial Information
- Was the Third Amendment to the GSE Bailouts Fair?
- State of Distress?
- Bail-in Debt : Will the Supervisors Pull the Trigger in Time?
- Should Financial Stability Be a Goal of Monetary Policy?
- Monetary Policy, Economic Modeling, and Unknown Unknowns
- Nonbank Financial Firms and Financial Stability
- Central Banking in the Shadows
- The Impact of Regulation on Monetary Policy
- Liquidity Regulation and Financial Stability
- The Change in the FDIC Assessment Base
- Who Will Be Central to the Financial System?
- Lessons for E-Money from the U.S. Experience with Bank Notes
- Liquidity Backstops and Dynamic Debt Runs
- Breaking Down Geographic Barriers on Banks : U.S. and EU Recent Experiences
- Large, Complex Financial Regulation
- Marketplace Lending's Role in the Consumer Credit Market
- Using Market Information for Fail-Safe Supervisory Triggers
- The Role of Liquidity in the Financial System
- Financing the Fed's Balance Sheet : Implications for the Treasury
- The Role of Intermediary Competition in Government Interventions : The Case of HARP
- Stress Testing with the Help of Bayes' Theorem
- Getting a Grip on Liquidity
- Ending Too Big to Fail: Lessons from Continental Illinois
- Getting a Grip on Liquidity : Conference Takeaways
- TAF: The Cure-All for Stigma?
- "Smart Contracts" in a Complex World
- Market Expectations of Fed Policy : A New Tool
- Avoiding Regulation : FinTech versus the Sharing Economy
- Prudential Regulation, Big Data, and Machine Learning
- The Impact of Extraordinary Policy on Intermediaries
- The Revolving Door
- Interest on Reserves
- Conflicts of Interest in Securitization and the U.S. Housing Crisis
- Managing Global Financial Risks
- The Evolving Financial Supermarket
- Congressional Control over the Banking Agencies' Budgets
- Fintech and Financial Inclusion
- Government Debt Subsidies and Financial Stability
- Enhanced Safety : The EU's Data Protection Rules
- Risk-On/Risk-Off in the Long Run
- Financial Regulation: Fit for the Future?
- Good Models, Bad Models
- The Initial Coin Offerings Market
- The Initial Coin Offerings Market (Part 2)
- Machines Learning Finance
- Some Blockchain Challenges
- Blockchain Challenges and Governance
- China's Two-Pillar Policy for the Renminbi
- Consumer Credit, Blockchains, and Machine Learning
- Financial Stability Implications of New Technology
- Tech-Driven Financial Innovation in Banking
- Carry Factors : Characteristics and Informational Content
- Fractional Reserve Cryptocurrency Banks
- Cashless Stores and Cash Users
- Mapping the Financial Frontier
- Trusted Third Parties
- Procyclicality : CECL versus Incurred Loss Model
- Financial System of the Future
- 2020s
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Notes from the Vault was on hiatus after the March/April 2012 post; it restarted in March 2013. In December 2020, Notes from the Vault became part of the Atlanta Fed's Policy Hub publication.
2009-2020
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Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Notes from the Vault. 2009-2020. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/7163, accessed on September 18, 2024.