Essays on Monetary Policy and Financial Markets
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2025
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
This dissertation investigates how U.S. monetary policy actions—and the uncertainty that surrounds
them—shape equity-market behavior at home and abroad. Across three self-contained
essays, I employ high-frequency surprise measures and news-based uncertainty indices to document
heterogeneous responses that vary by risk factor, industry, and country.
The first essay, "The Impact of Monetary Policy Surprises on Equity Risk Factors and Market
Sectors," investigates the heterogeneous responses within the U.S. equity market. Utilizing
high-frequency monetary policy surprises derived from interest rate futures around FOMC
announcements, this study regresses daily returns of Fama-French equity risk factors (Market,
Size, Value, Profitability, Investment, augmented with Momentum, Short-Term Reversal,
and Long-Term Reversal) and detailed industry portfolios on these surprises. Key findings
indicate a significant negative market-wide response to tightening surprises. Notably, style
factors exhibit varied sensitivities: Size (SMB), Investment (CMA), Momentum (MOM), and
Long-Term Reversal (LTR) show positive responses to tightening, while Short-Term Reversal
(STR) reacts negatively. Value (HML) and Profitability (RMW) show insignificant immediate
responses. Cyclical and discretionary industry sectors demonstrate pronounced negative reactions,
whereas defensive sectors exhibit more muted impacts, underscoring the differential
transmission of policy shocks across the U.S. equity landscape.
The second essay, "The Heterogeneous Impact of Monetary Policy Uncertainty on Equity
Market Sectors," examines how uncertainty surrounding U.S. monetary policy affects various
U.S. equity sectors. Employing the Husted-Rogers-Sun (2020) news-based Monetary Policy
Uncertainty (MPU) index, this essay uses OLS regressions to analyze the contemporaneous relationship
between monthly MPU changes and the excess returns of the Fama-French 12 industry portfolios.
The results consistently reveal a negative association between MPU and sectoral
returns, with statistically significant adverse impacts observed for Non-Durables, Manufacturing,
Chemicals, Telecommunications, Retail & Wholesale, and Health sectors. Financials and a
miscellaneous "Other" category show weakly significant negative effects. While MPU demonstrates
a pervasive negative influence, its explanatory power for monthly return variations is
modest, suggesting it acts as a secondary or episodic driver.
The third essay, "The Transmission of Monetary Policy Surprises to International Equity
Markets," extends the analysis of U.S. monetary policy surprises to the global stage. Using
the Bauer-Swanson (2023) high-frequency surprise dataset, this study assesses the spillover
effects on equity markets in developed economies, emerging markets, and countries with fixed
exchange rate regimes. The findings highlight significant heterogeneity: key emerging markets,
particularly Brazil and Mexico, exhibit strong and statistically significant negative sensitivities
to U.S. tightening surprises. In contrast, responses in most developed markets are generally
subdued and statistically insignificant. Markets with fixed exchange rates to the USD, notably
Dubai (UAE), can even display significant positive reactions, suggesting complex interactions
between U.S. policy, local economic structures (such as commodity dependence), and regional
financial dynamics.
Collectively, these essays contribute to a deeper understanding of how monetary policy
actions and the uncertainty surrounding them differentially affect various segments of domestic
and international equity markets. The findings offer implications for investment strategy, risk
management, and the formulation of monetary policy in an interconnected global financial
system.
Description
This dissertation investigates how U.S. monetary policy actions—and the uncertainty that surrounds
them—shape equity-market behavior at home and abroad. Across three self-contained
essays, I employ high-frequency surprise measures and news-based uncertainty indices to document
heterogeneous responses that vary by risk factor, industry, and country.
Keywords
Equity Factors, Stock returns, Monetary policy Uncertainty, Monetary policy Surprise, Monetary policy Spillover, Monetary Policy
Citation
Alsuwayni, A. (2025). Essays on Monetary Policy and Financial Markets. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. (32047069).