Quantitative Easing (QE)
FundamentalsA central bank creating new money to buy assets and push interest rates down — generally a currency-weakening policy.
Quantitative easing is an unconventional monetary policy where a central bank creates new money to buy financial assets — usually government bonds — in order to inject liquidity into the economy and push interest rates lower when conventional rate cuts have reached their limit. It generally weakens a currency by expanding its supply and signaling a prolonged low-rate environment.
The reverse process, quantitative tightening (QT), shrinks the central bank's balance sheet and typically supports the currency by tightening financial conditions.
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