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    <title>Working Papers, Economic Studies and Economic Notes</title>
    <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/the-snb/mandates-goals/research</link>
    <description>Swiss National Bank Working Papers zeigen laufende Forschungsergebnisse. Ihr Zweck ist es, Kommentare auszulösen und Diskussionen anzuregen. Die in den Working Papers geäusserten Meinungen sind jene der Autoren und müssen nicht notwendigerweise mit der Auffassung der Schweizerischen Nationalbank übereinstimmen. Swiss National Bank Economic Studies behandeln ökonomische und finanzwirtschaftliche Themen, die in Beziehung stehen zu den Aufgaben der Schweizerischen Nationalbank. Die Analysen und Schlussfolgerungen sind jene der Autoren. Die Tatsache, dass die Ergebnisse in dieser Publikationsreihe veröffentlicht werden, bedeutet nicht notwendigerweise, dass sie von der Schweizerischen Nationalbank geteilt werden.</description>
    <dc:publisher>SNB</dc:publisher>
    <dc:date>2026-03-14T05:47:56Z</dc:date>
    <dc:rights>Copyright © Schweizerische Nationalbank, Zürich (Schweiz) 2026</dc:rights>
    <dcterms:created>2026-03-14T05:47:56Z</dcterms:created>
    <dcterms:license>https://www.snb.ch/de/srv/disclaimer</dcterms:license>
    <item>
      <title>ES - 2026-02-23 - Vincent Barthe, Lukas Frei and Thomas Maag: How resilient are decentralised markets? Insights from a CME outage into FX market functioning</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2026/economic_note_2026_02</link>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2026/economic_note_2026_02</guid>
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        <cb:simpleTitle>How resilient are decentralised markets? Insights from a CME outage into FX market functioning</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2026-02-22T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Market structure</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Foreign exchange</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Decentralised markets</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Price discovery</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Market outage</cb:keyword>
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          <cb:title>How resilient are decentralised markets? Insights from a CME outage into FX market functioning</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2026/economic_note_2026_02</cb:link>
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          <cb:givenName>Vincent</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Barthe</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Vincent Barthe</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Lukas</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Frei</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Lukas Frei</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Thomas</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Maag</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Thomas Maag</cb:nameAsWritten>
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        <cb:byline>Vincent Barthe, Lukas Frei and Thomas Maag</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2026</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Economic Studies</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2026-02</cb:issue>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2026-02-22T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>ES - 2026-02-20 - Elliot Beck, Franziska Eckert, Linus Kühne, Helge Liebert and Rina Rosenblatt-Wisch: NEOS - A timely indicator for economic outlook based on Swiss newspaper articles</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2026/economic_note_2026_01</link>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2026/economic_note_2026_01</guid>
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        <cb:simpleTitle>NEOS - A timely indicator for economic outlook based on Swiss newspaper articles</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2026-02-19T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Sentiment analysis</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Economic outlook</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Forecasting</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Big data</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Large language models</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Natural language processing</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Neural networks</cb:keyword>
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          <cb:title>NEOS - A timely indicator for economic outlook based on Swiss newspaper articles</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2026/economic_note_2026_01</cb:link>
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          <cb:givenName>Elliot</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Beck</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Elliot Beck</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Franziska</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Eckert</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Franziska Eckert</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Linus</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Kühne</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Linus Kühne</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Helge</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Liebert</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Helge Liebert</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Rina</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Rosenblatt-Wisch</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Rina Rosenblatt-Wisch</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Elliot Beck, Franziska Eckert, Linus Kühne, Helge Liebert and Rina Rosenblatt-Wisch</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2026</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Economic Studies</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2026-01</cb:issue>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2026-02-19T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2026-02-18 - Elliot Beck, Franziska Eckert, Linus Kühne, Helge Liebert and Rina Rosenblatt-Wisch: Measuring economic outlook in the news</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_04</link>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_04</guid>
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        <cb:simpleTitle>Measuring economic outlook in the news</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2026-02-17T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Sentiment analysis</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Economic outlook</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Forecasting</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Big data</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Large language models</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Natural language processing</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Neural networks</cb:keyword>
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          <cb:title>Measuring economic outlook in the news</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_04</cb:link>
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          <cb:givenName>Elliot</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Beck</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Elliot Beck</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Franziska</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Eckert</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Franziska Eckert</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Linus</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Kühne</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Linus Kühne</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Helge</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Liebert</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Helge Liebert</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Rina</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Rosenblatt-Wisch</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Rina Rosenblatt-Wisch</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Elliot Beck, Franziska Eckert, Linus Kühne, Helge Liebert and Rina Rosenblatt-Wisch</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2026</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2026-04</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>E66</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>C45</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>C55</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2026-02-17T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2026-01-23 - Romain Baeriswyl, Kene Boun My and Camille Cornand: Central Bank Digital Currency and Gresham's law: An experimental analysis</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_03</link>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_03</guid>
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        <cb:simpleTitle>Central Bank Digital Currency and Gresham's law: An experimental analysis</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2026-01-22T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Central Bank Digital Currency</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Gresham's law</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Laboratory experiment</cb:keyword>
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          <cb:title>Central Bank Digital Currency and Gresham's law: An experimental analysis</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_03</cb:link>
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          <cb:givenName>Romain</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Baeriswyl</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Romain Baeriswyl</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Kene</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Boun My</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Kene Boun My</cb:nameAsWritten>
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        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
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          <cb:givenName>Camille</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Cornand</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Camille Cornand</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Romain Baeriswyl, Kene Boun My and Camille Cornand</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2026</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2026-03</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>E52</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E58</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2026-01-22T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2026-01-22 - Emanuel Nussli, Rachel Arulraj-Cordonier, Flurina Strasser, Marko Nanut Petrič, Morten Bech and Antonio Pipino: From listings to all-tenant rents: A probabilistic model</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_02</link>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_02</guid>
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        <cb:simpleTitle>From listings to all-tenant rents: A probabilistic model</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2026-01-21T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Asking rents</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Rent indices</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Duration model</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Shelter inflation</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
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          <cb:title>From listings to all-tenant rents: A probabilistic model</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_02</cb:link>
        </cb:resource>
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          <cb:givenName>Emanuel</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Nussli</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Emanuel Nussli</cb:nameAsWritten>
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        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
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          <cb:givenName>Rachel</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Arulraj-Cordonier</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Rachel Arulraj-Cordonier</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
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          <cb:givenName>Flurina</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Strasser</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Flurina Strasser</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
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          <cb:givenName>Marko</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Nanut Petrič</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Marko Nanut Petrič</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
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          <cb:givenName>Morten</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Bech</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Morten Bech</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Antonio</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Pipino</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Antonio Pipino</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Emanuel Nussli, Rachel Arulraj-Cordonier, Flurina Strasser, Marko Nanut Petrič, Morten Bech and Antonio Pipino</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2026</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2026-02</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>R31</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E31</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E37</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2026-01-21T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2026-01-13 - Sébastien Blanco, Miriam Koomen and Pinar Yesin: Heterogeneous effects of monetary policy surprises on bond fund flows</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_01</link>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_01</guid>
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        <cb:simpleTitle>Heterogeneous effects of monetary policy surprises on bond fund flows</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2026-01-12T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>NBFIs</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Bond funds</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Monetary policy surprises</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Cross-border spillovers</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>Heterogeneous effects of monetary policy surprises on bond fund flows</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2026/working_paper_2026_01</cb:link>
        </cb:resource>
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          <cb:givenName>Sébastien</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Blanco</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Sébastien Blanco</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Miriam</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Koomen</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Miriam Koomen</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
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          <cb:givenName>Pinar</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Yesin</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Pinar Yesin</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Sébastien Blanco, Miriam Koomen and Pinar Yesin</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2026</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2026-01</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>G23</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E52</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E44</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2026-01-12T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>ES - 2025-12-18 - Florian Böser and Rebecca Gerosa: How can repurchase agreements be settled on a distributed ledger? Insights from the Helvetia pilot</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_14</link>
      <description>The SNB implements its monetary policy by using several instruments, including repurchase agreement (repo) transactions. The SNB conducted test repo transactions involving tokenised assets and wholesale central bank digital currency. These so-called digital repos were settled on a distributed ledger technology (DLT) infrastructure. The tests revealed that settlement of repos on a DLT-based infrastructure is feasible, and provided insights into the corresponding challenges. Specifically, integrating a DLT-based infrastructure into today's money market as in the test setup presents challenges related to market fragmentation, the need for enhanced collateral management capabilities, and the harmonisation of communication standards.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_14</guid>
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        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>How can repurchase agreements be settled on a distributed ledger? Insights from the Helvetia pilot</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-12-17T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Swiss National Bank</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Repo market</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Distributed ledger technology</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Tokenised assets</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Wholesale central bank digital currency</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>How can repurchase agreements be settled on a distributed ledger? Insights from the Helvetia pilot</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_14</cb:link>
          <cb:description>The SNB implements its monetary policy by using several instruments, including repurchase agreement (repo) transactions. The SNB conducted test repo transactions involving tokenised assets and wholesale central bank digital currency. These so-called digital repos were settled on a distributed ledger technology (DLT) infrastructure. The tests revealed that settlement of repos on a DLT-based infrastructure is feasible, and provided insights into the corresponding challenges. Specifically, integrating a DLT-based infrastructure into today's money market as in the test setup presents challenges related to market fragmentation, the need for enhanced collateral management capabilities, and the harmonisation of communication standards.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Florian</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Böser</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Florian Böser</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Rebecca</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Gerosa</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Rebecca Gerosa</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Florian Böser and Rebecca Gerosa</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Economic Studies</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-14</cb:issue>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-12-17T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2025-12-18 - Marc Blatter and Joséphine Molleyres: LCR optimization by banks: Evidence from changes in liquidity requirements in Switzerland</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_18</link>
      <description>In this paper, we analyze the effects of the introduction of the liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) on banks' funding behavior. We use changes in regulatory liquidity requirements in Switzerland as a natural experiment. Using data for the period before and after the LCR was applied for all banks in Switzerland, our dataset allows us to analyze how the introduction of the LCR affects the banks' funding structure. Our results show that the LCR had its intended effects as banks reduced their exposure to short-term funding. At the same time, we find evidence for optimization of the LCR by banks. Banks optimize their LCR by extending the maturities of liabilities slightly over 30 days, which leads to an improvement in the LCR by 10 percentage points on average. Our results imply that it makes sense to complement the 30-day LCR with longer-term liquidity requirements to reduce cliff risks.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_18</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>LCR optimization by banks: Evidence from changes in liquidity requirements in Switzerland</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-12-17T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Regulatory arbitrage</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Liquidity regulation</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Contractual maturity mismatches</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Funding structure</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>LCR optimization by banks: Evidence from changes in liquidity requirements in Switzerland</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_18</cb:link>
          <cb:description>In this paper, we analyze the effects of the introduction of the liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) on banks' funding behavior. We use changes in regulatory liquidity requirements in Switzerland as a natural experiment. Using data for the period before and after the LCR was applied for all banks in Switzerland, our dataset allows us to analyze how the introduction of the LCR affects the banks' funding structure. Our results show that the LCR had its intended effects as banks reduced their exposure to short-term funding. At the same time, we find evidence for optimization of the LCR by banks. Banks optimize their LCR by extending the maturities of liabilities slightly over 30 days, which leads to an improvement in the LCR by 10 percentage points on average. Our results imply that it makes sense to complement the 30-day LCR with longer-term liquidity requirements to reduce cliff risks.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Marc</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Blatter</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Marc Blatter</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Joséphine</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Molleyres</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Joséphine Molleyres</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Marc Blatter and Joséphine Molleyres</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-18</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>G21</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>G28</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-12-17T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2025-12-17 - Johannes Eugster, Giovanni Rosso and Pinar Yesin: The rise of inelastic intermediaries and exchange rate dynamics</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_17</link>
      <description>This paper investigates the interaction between the rise of inelastic intermediaries, e.g. mutual funds and exchange traded funds (ETFs), and exchange rate dynamics. By leveraging regulatory microdata on the universe of mutual funds domiciled in Switzerland, we first document the remarkable rise of the market share of this industry. Mutual funds went from holding 5% of domestic currency fixed income instruments in 2005 to 51% in 2024. We show that these intermediaries have strict mandates and trade only when faced with in(out)-flows. This makes the market more price-inelastic on aggregate in response to asset demand shocks. We develop an analytical model that we bring to the microdata. We find that (i) an inflow into domestic mutual funds with a large portfolio weight on the domestic currency appreciates it and (ii) the reduced aggregate elasticity makes the exchange rate more sensitive to capital flows. Finally, using a weekly panel of five advanced economies, we document the external validity of this mechanism. We show that the currencies whose markets see a higher prevalence of inelastic intermediaries react significantly more strongly to capital inflows.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_17</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>The rise of inelastic intermediaries and exchange rate dynamics</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-12-16T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Inelastic intermediaries</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Mutual funds</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Exchange rate dynamics</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Capital flows</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>The rise of inelastic intermediaries and exchange rate dynamics</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_17</cb:link>
          <cb:description>This paper investigates the interaction between the rise of inelastic intermediaries, e.g. mutual funds and exchange traded funds (ETFs), and exchange rate dynamics. By leveraging regulatory microdata on the universe of mutual funds domiciled in Switzerland, we first document the remarkable rise of the market share of this industry. Mutual funds went from holding 5% of domestic currency fixed income instruments in 2005 to 51% in 2024. We show that these intermediaries have strict mandates and trade only when faced with in(out)-flows. This makes the market more price-inelastic on aggregate in response to asset demand shocks. We develop an analytical model that we bring to the microdata. We find that (i) an inflow into domestic mutual funds with a large portfolio weight on the domestic currency appreciates it and (ii) the reduced aggregate elasticity makes the exchange rate more sensitive to capital flows. Finally, using a weekly panel of five advanced economies, we document the external validity of this mechanism. We show that the currencies whose markets see a higher prevalence of inelastic intermediaries react significantly more strongly to capital inflows.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Johannes</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Eugster</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Johannes Eugster</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Giovanni</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Rosso</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Giovanni Rosso</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Pinar</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Yesin</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Pinar Yesin</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Johannes Eugster, Giovanni Rosso and Pinar Yesin</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-17</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>F31</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>G23</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>G15</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>F21</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E44</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-12-16T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>ES - 2025-11-13 - Romain Baeriswyl, Andreas Freitag and Maja Ganarin: Robust bank lending in a changing credit market environment</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_13</link>
      <description>The Swiss credit market environment has changed significantly since 2022. Interest rates have risen for the first time in 15 years, UBS has acquired Credit Suisse, and regulatory requirements have been tightened. The latter includes the introduction of the "Basel III Final" banking regulation and more stringent liquidity requirements for systemically important banks. Despite these changes, credit volumes have increased robustly in Switzerland, and bank lending has adjusted to both the tightening and subsequent loosening of monetary policy, as expected.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_13</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>Robust bank lending in a changing credit market environment</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-11-12T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Bank lending</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Regulatory requirements</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Banks' funding costs</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>Robust bank lending in a changing credit market environment</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_13</cb:link>
          <cb:description>The Swiss credit market environment has changed significantly since 2022. Interest rates have risen for the first time in 15 years, UBS has acquired Credit Suisse, and regulatory requirements have been tightened. The latter includes the introduction of the "Basel III Final" banking regulation and more stringent liquidity requirements for systemically important banks. Despite these changes, credit volumes have increased robustly in Switzerland, and bank lending has adjusted to both the tightening and subsequent loosening of monetary policy, as expected.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Romain</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Baeriswyl</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Romain Baeriswyl</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Andreas</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Freitag</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Andreas Freitag</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Maja</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Ganarin</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Maja Ganarin</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Romain Baeriswyl, Andreas Freitag and Maja Ganarin</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Economic Studies</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-13</cb:issue>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-11-12T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>ES - 2025-11-03 - Samuel Reynard: Is the quantity of money informative for future inflation? The Swiss case</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_12</link>
      <description>Indicators based on money in the hands of the public have fallen somewhat out of fashion for monetary policy analysis. The reason is the instability of money demand that was observed in many advanced economies in the 1990s and 2000s. In this note, I show that a careful assessment of monetary developments can still be informative about potential medium-term inflationary pressures in Switzerland.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_12</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>Is the quantity of money informative for future inflation? The Swiss case</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-11-02T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Money</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Inflation</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Monetary policy</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>Is the quantity of money informative for future inflation? The Swiss case</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_12</cb:link>
          <cb:description>Indicators based on money in the hands of the public have fallen somewhat out of fashion for monetary policy analysis. The reason is the instability of money demand that was observed in many advanced economies in the 1990s and 2000s. In this note, I show that a careful assessment of monetary developments can still be informative about potential medium-term inflationary pressures in Switzerland.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Samuel</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Reynard</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Samuel Reynard</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Samuel Reynard</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Economic Studies</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-12</cb:issue>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-11-02T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>ES - 2025-10-30 - Severin Bernhard and Philipp Haene: Exploring the concept of uniformity of money</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_11</link>
      <description>Uniformity of money is a topic that has gained increasing attention with the emergence of new forms of digital money. It describes the principle that different forms of money in the same currency are used and traded at par, i.e., at the same value. This economic note shows why uniformity of money is important for central banks and what factors underpin it. The note outlines measures to support these factors and finishes by introducing a layered perspective on the concept of uniformity of money.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_11</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>Exploring the concept of uniformity of money</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-10-29T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Uniformity</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Singleness</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Money</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Digital money</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Stablecoins</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Central banks</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Regulation</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Trust</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Settlement</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Convertibility</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>Exploring the concept of uniformity of money</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_11</cb:link>
          <cb:description>Uniformity of money is a topic that has gained increasing attention with the emergence of new forms of digital money. It describes the principle that different forms of money in the same currency are used and traded at par, i.e., at the same value. This economic note shows why uniformity of money is important for central banks and what factors underpin it. The note outlines measures to support these factors and finishes by introducing a layered perspective on the concept of uniformity of money.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Severin</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Bernhard</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Severin Bernhard</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Philipp</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Haene</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Philipp Haene</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Severin Bernhard and Philipp Haene</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Economic Studies</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-11</cb:issue>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-10-29T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>ES - 2025-10-27 - Simone Auer, Simon Beyeler and Jonas Meier: How large is the impact of administered prices on inflation in Switzerland?</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_10</link>
      <description>Inflation in Switzerland has been low over the past 20 years, both from an international and a historical perspective. One hypothesis is that this is due to the high share of 'administered' - or regulated - prices in the Swiss consumer price basket. We show that this hypothesis is not supported by the data. Inflation for products with administered prices was typically lower than inflation for other products and thus tended to dampen inflation overall. However, the effect was limited. Swiss inflation and the Swiss inflation gap with the euro area were determined mainly by the evolution of non-administered prices.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_10</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>How large is the impact of administered prices on inflation in Switzerland?</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-10-26T23:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Inflation</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Switzerland</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Consumer prices</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Consumption basket</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Administered prices</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>How large is the impact of administered prices on inflation in Switzerland?</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/economic-notes/2025/economic_note_2025_10</cb:link>
          <cb:description>Inflation in Switzerland has been low over the past 20 years, both from an international and a historical perspective. One hypothesis is that this is due to the high share of 'administered' - or regulated - prices in the Swiss consumer price basket. We show that this hypothesis is not supported by the data. Inflation for products with administered prices was typically lower than inflation for other products and thus tended to dampen inflation overall. However, the effect was limited. Swiss inflation and the Swiss inflation gap with the euro area were determined mainly by the evolution of non-administered prices.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Simone</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Auer</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Simone Auer</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Simon</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Beyeler</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Simon Beyeler</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Jonas</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Meier</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Jonas Meier</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Simone Auer, Simon Beyeler and Jonas Meier</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Economic Studies</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-10</cb:issue>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-10-26T23:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2025-10-23 - Romain Baeriswyl, Pierrick Clerc and Camille Cornand: Business cycle fluctuations and monetary policy under heterogeneous information: A literature review</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_16</link>
      <description>Modelling business cycle fluctuations and the nonneutrality of money is an ongoing challenge for macroeconomists. While the imperfect-information hypothesis developed by Phelps and Lucas in the 1970s had been abandoned in favour of the sticky-price hypothesis, a recent trend in the literature has put the imperfect-information hypothesis back on the agenda to explain business fluctuations and monetary nonneutrality. The success of this revival lies in the introduction of strategic uncertainty into a framework of heterogeneous information. The present paper presents this macroeconomic framework and provides a brief overview of recent advances in the literature.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_16</guid>
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        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-10-22T22:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Heterogeneous information</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Strategic complementarities</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Higher-order beliefs</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Coordination</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Beauty-contest</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Monetary nonneutrality</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Business cycle</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Communication policy</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Monetary policy</cb:keyword>
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          <cb:title>Business cycle fluctuations and monetary policy under heterogeneous information: A literature review</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_16</cb:link>
          <cb:description>Modelling business cycle fluctuations and the nonneutrality of money is an ongoing challenge for macroeconomists. While the imperfect-information hypothesis developed by Phelps and Lucas in the 1970s had been abandoned in favour of the sticky-price hypothesis, a recent trend in the literature has put the imperfect-information hypothesis back on the agenda to explain business fluctuations and monetary nonneutrality. The success of this revival lies in the introduction of strategic uncertainty into a framework of heterogeneous information. The present paper presents this macroeconomic framework and provides a brief overview of recent advances in the literature.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
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          <cb:givenName>Romain</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Baeriswyl</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Romain Baeriswyl</cb:nameAsWritten>
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          <cb:givenName>Pierrick</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Clerc</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Pierrick Clerc</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Camille</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Cornand</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Camille Cornand</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Romain Baeriswyl, Pierrick Clerc and Camille Cornand</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-16</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>C72</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>D83</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E12</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E32</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E52</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-10-22T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2025-10-03 - Grace Cimaszewski, Francesco Da Dalt, Thomas Moser and Adrian Perrig: SCION and cross-border payments: Enhancing security and compliance in distributed ledger networks</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_15</link>
      <description>Cross-border payments remain expensive, slow, and opaque due to reliance on correspondent banking. Distributed ledger technology (DLT) offers a possible alternative, enabling peer-to-peer transactions at lower cost with greater speed, transparency, and resilience. However, DLT systems largely rely on the public Internet, which exposes them to network-based outages and attacks. SCION, a secure next-generation Internet architecture, can operate side-by-side with today's Internet to mitigate network-related risks. In addition to the security benefits, SCION also provides a novel approach to enforce regulatory compliance on a permissionless DLT with a governance model well-suited for multi-jurisdictional platforms. We present the first practical blueprint for deploying a DLT-based settlement system on SCION and demonstrate, through a simulation-based analysis of the real-world DLT system Sui, that SCION can mitigate more than half of routing-based network attacks, even when only partially adopted by DLT validators. Overall, SCION can provide a robust infrastructure foundation for DLT-based cross-border payment systems by enhancing their security, reliability, and regulatory compliance.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_15</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
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        <cb:simpleTitle>SCION and cross-border payments: Enhancing security and compliance in distributed ledger networks</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-10-02T22:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>DLT reliability</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>DLT availability</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Network attacks</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Routing attacks</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>DDoS</cb:keyword>
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          <cb:title>SCION and cross-border payments: Enhancing security and compliance in distributed ledger networks</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_15</cb:link>
          <cb:description>Cross-border payments remain expensive, slow, and opaque due to reliance on correspondent banking. Distributed ledger technology (DLT) offers a possible alternative, enabling peer-to-peer transactions at lower cost with greater speed, transparency, and resilience. However, DLT systems largely rely on the public Internet, which exposes them to network-based outages and attacks. SCION, a secure next-generation Internet architecture, can operate side-by-side with today's Internet to mitigate network-related risks. In addition to the security benefits, SCION also provides a novel approach to enforce regulatory compliance on a permissionless DLT with a governance model well-suited for multi-jurisdictional platforms. We present the first practical blueprint for deploying a DLT-based settlement system on SCION and demonstrate, through a simulation-based analysis of the real-world DLT system Sui, that SCION can mitigate more than half of routing-based network attacks, even when only partially adopted by DLT validators. Overall, SCION can provide a robust infrastructure foundation for DLT-based cross-border payment systems by enhancing their security, reliability, and regulatory compliance.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Grace</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Cimaszewski</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Grace Cimaszewski</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Francesco</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Da Dalt</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Francesco Da Dalt</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Thomas</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Moser</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Thomas Moser</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Adrian</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Perrig</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Adrian Perrig</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Grace Cimaszewski, Francesco Da Dalt, Thomas Moser and Adrian Perrig</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-15</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>E42</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>F33</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>G21</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-10-02T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2025-09-19 - Julius Mattern and Christoph Meyer: Beyond interbank: Identifying critical participants in integrated RTGS systems using payment type and temporal dynamics</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_14</link>
      <description>As modern economies increasingly adopt digital and instant payments, ensuring the resilience of payment systems and maintaining public trust have become more critical. This paper extends the network and clustering approach of Glowka et al. (2025) to identify critical participants in real-time gross settlement (RTGS) systems - those whose failure could disrupt system continuity. Our extension incorporates three key dimensions: payment type (interbank vs. customer), intrayear temporal frequency, and transaction view (value vs. volume). With these dimensions, we derive an extensive set of granular criticality scenarios and weight each scenario result by its economic activity to reflect its operational relevance. Applying this method to transaction data from SIC, Switzerland's RTGS system, we find that, beyond large international banks, mid-sized domestic banks and, occasionally, financial market infrastructures also play critical roles, especially during periods of heightened economic activity and night-time settlement hours. These criticality results are consistent, although some participants feature more prominently in the volume-based view. Our findings provide system operators and regulators with complementary tools to meet the Principles for Financial Market Infrastructures (PFMI), enabling context-specific assessment of criticality in RTGS systems and informing realistic stress test scenarios amid a rapidly evolving payment landscape.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_14</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>Beyond interbank: Identifying critical participants in integrated RTGS systems using payment type and temporal dynamics</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-09-18T22:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Payment system</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Systemic risk</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Settlement</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Central bank</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Customer payments</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>Beyond interbank: Identifying critical participants in integrated RTGS systems using payment type and temporal dynamics</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_14</cb:link>
          <cb:description>As modern economies increasingly adopt digital and instant payments, ensuring the resilience of payment systems and maintaining public trust have become more critical. This paper extends the network and clustering approach of Glowka et al. (2025) to identify critical participants in real-time gross settlement (RTGS) systems - those whose failure could disrupt system continuity. Our extension incorporates three key dimensions: payment type (interbank vs. customer), intrayear temporal frequency, and transaction view (value vs. volume). With these dimensions, we derive an extensive set of granular criticality scenarios and weight each scenario result by its economic activity to reflect its operational relevance. Applying this method to transaction data from SIC, Switzerland's RTGS system, we find that, beyond large international banks, mid-sized domestic banks and, occasionally, financial market infrastructures also play critical roles, especially during periods of heightened economic activity and night-time settlement hours. These criticality results are consistent, although some participants feature more prominently in the volume-based view. Our findings provide system operators and regulators with complementary tools to meet the Principles for Financial Market Infrastructures (PFMI), enabling context-specific assessment of criticality in RTGS systems and informing realistic stress test scenarios amid a rapidly evolving payment landscape.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Julius</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Mattern</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Julius Mattern</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Christoph</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Meyer</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Christoph Meyer</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Julius Mattern and Christoph Meyer</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-14</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>E42</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>D62</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E44</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>E58</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>G21</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>J33</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-09-18T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2025-09-05 - Jonas Heim and Thomas Nitschka: On the carbon premium in Swiss stock returns</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_13</link>
      <description>This paper evaluates whether CO2 emission levels or emission intensities are firm characteristics that drive Swiss firms’ stock returns. We show that standard characteristics such as size and the book-to-market equity ratio are more important determinants of firm-level stock returns than are CO2 levels (intensities). Brown firms (high CO2 levels or intensities) tend to be large and exhibit low book-to-market equity ratios, whereas their green counterparts are small and exhibit high book-to-market equity ratios. This explains why return differences between brown and green firms are statistically indistinguishable from zero after controlling for exposures to standard risk factors.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_13</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>On the carbon premium in Swiss stock returns</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-09-04T22:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Climate change</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>CO2 emissions</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Event study</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Risk premium</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>On the carbon premium in Swiss stock returns</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_13</cb:link>
          <cb:description>This paper evaluates whether CO2 emission levels or emission intensities are firm characteristics that drive Swiss firms’ stock returns. We show that standard characteristics such as size and the book-to-market equity ratio are more important determinants of firm-level stock returns than are CO2 levels (intensities). Brown firms (high CO2 levels or intensities) tend to be large and exhibit low book-to-market equity ratios, whereas their green counterparts are small and exhibit high book-to-market equity ratios. This explains why return differences between brown and green firms are statistically indistinguishable from zero after controlling for exposures to standard risk factors.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Jonas</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Heim</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Jonas Heim</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Thomas</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Nitschka</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Thomas Nitschka</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Jonas Heim and Thomas Nitschka</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-13</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>G12</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>Q54</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-09-04T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2025-08-27 - Marius Faber and Gabriel Züllig: Kinky Europe: Evidence from the regional Phillips curve in the euro area</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_12</link>
      <description>We estimate the slope of the Phillips curve in the euro area, allowing for nonlinearities - or kinks - in the relationship between labor market slack and inflation. We exploit cross-country variation in labor market conditions in the period 2001-2024, absorbing aggregate shocks and endogenous monetary policy reactions with time fixed effects. We find that while the Phillips curve is usually quite flat, it becomes at least three times as steep if the labor market is sufficiently tight. This kink is more pronounced in the euro area than in the United States, potentially because of more rigid labor markets. Our estimates imply, however, that despite this nonlinearity, the majority of the post-Covid inflation surge was due to factors other than tight labor markets.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_12</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>Kinky Europe: Evidence from the regional Phillips curve in the euro area</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-08-26T22:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Phillips curve</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Inflation</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Nonlinearities</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>Kinky Europe: Evidence from the regional Phillips curve in the euro area</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_12</cb:link>
          <cb:description>We estimate the slope of the Phillips curve in the euro area, allowing for nonlinearities - or kinks - in the relationship between labor market slack and inflation. We exploit cross-country variation in labor market conditions in the period 2001-2024, absorbing aggregate shocks and endogenous monetary policy reactions with time fixed effects. We find that while the Phillips curve is usually quite flat, it becomes at least three times as steep if the labor market is sufficiently tight. This kink is more pronounced in the euro area than in the United States, potentially because of more rigid labor markets. Our estimates imply, however, that despite this nonlinearity, the majority of the post-Covid inflation surge was due to factors other than tight labor markets.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Marius</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Faber</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Marius Faber</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Gabriel</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Züllig</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Gabriel Züllig</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Marius Faber and Gabriel Züllig</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-12</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>E30</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-08-26T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2025-08-26 - Daniele Ballinari and Jessica Maly: FX sentiment analysis with large language models</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_11</link>
      <description>We enhance sentiment analysis in the foreign exchange (FX) market by fine-tuning large language models (LLMs) to better understand and interpret the complex language specific to FX markets. We build on existing methods by using state-of-the-art open source LLMs, fine-tuning them with labelled FX news articles and then comparing their performance against traditional approaches and alternative models. Furthermore, we tested these fine-tuned LLMs by creating investment strategies based on the sentiment they detect in FX analysis articles with the goal of demonstrating how well these strategies perform in real-world trading scenarios. Our findings indicate that the fine-tuned LLMs outperform the existing methods in terms of both the classification accuracy and trading performance, highlighting their potential for improving FX market sentiment analysis and investment decision-making.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_11</guid>
      <cb:paper rdf:parseType="Resource">
        <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Paper" />
        <cb:simpleTitle>FX sentiment analysis with large language models</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-08-25T22:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Large language models</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Sentiment analysis</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Fine-tuning</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Text classification</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Natural language processing</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Foreign exchange</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Financial markets</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Resource" />
          <cb:title>FX sentiment analysis with large language models</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_11</cb:link>
          <cb:description>We enhance sentiment analysis in the foreign exchange (FX) market by fine-tuning large language models (LLMs) to better understand and interpret the complex language specific to FX markets. We build on existing methods by using state-of-the-art open source LLMs, fine-tuning them with labelled FX news articles and then comparing their performance against traditional approaches and alternative models. Furthermore, we tested these fine-tuned LLMs by creating investment strategies based on the sentiment they detect in FX analysis articles with the goal of demonstrating how well these strategies perform in real-world trading scenarios. Our findings indicate that the fine-tuned LLMs outperform the existing methods in terms of both the classification accuracy and trading performance, highlighting their potential for improving FX market sentiment analysis and investment decision-making.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Daniele</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Ballinari</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Daniele Ballinari</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Jessica</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Maly</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Jessica Maly</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Daniele Ballinari and Jessica Maly</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-11</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>F31</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>G12</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>G15</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-08-25T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>WP - 2025-08-05 - Hubert János Kiss, Alfonso Rosa García and Lukas Voellmy: Redemption fees and gates in the lab</title>
      <link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_10</link>
      <description>Liquidity management tools - such as redemption fees (which impose a cost on withdrawals) or gates (which suspend withdrawals when they become excessive) - are commonly used in the fund industry with the aim of mitigating run behavior and reducing fund fragility. Recent attention has been paid to the fact that these tools may give rise to preemptive runs, where investors withdraw preemptively to avoid the risk of being affected by temporary redemption restrictions. Since real-market testing is not feasible, we use laboratory experiments to evaluate the effectiveness of redemption fees and gates in reducing money market fund runs, in a setting where investors may withdraw preemptively. We find that fees significantly reduce the propensity to run compared to the baseline without liquidity management tools, whereas gates do not lower the propensity to run. However, the effect of fees on withdrawal behavior is relatively small and takes some time to materialize. Overall, our experimental results indicate that preemptive runs are a real concern and that liquidity management tools are unlikely to eliminate fund fragility, which is consistent with the experience of the 2020 money market fund turmoil.</description>
      <guid>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_10</guid>
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        <cb:simpleTitle>Redemption fees and gates in the lab</cb:simpleTitle>
        <cb:occurrenceDate>2025-08-04T22:00:00Z</cb:occurrenceDate>
        <cb:institutionAbbrev>SNB</cb:institutionAbbrev>
        <cb:keyword>Coordination problem</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Experimental economics</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Money market funds</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Redemption fees</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Runs</cb:keyword>
        <cb:keyword>Suspension of convertibility</cb:keyword>
        <cb:resource rdf:parseType="Resource">
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          <cb:title>Redemption fees and gates in the lab</cb:title>
          <cb:link>https://www.snb.ch/de/publications/research/working-papers/2025/working_paper_2025_10</cb:link>
          <cb:description>Liquidity management tools - such as redemption fees (which impose a cost on withdrawals) or gates (which suspend withdrawals when they become excessive) - are commonly used in the fund industry with the aim of mitigating run behavior and reducing fund fragility. Recent attention has been paid to the fact that these tools may give rise to preemptive runs, where investors withdraw preemptively to avoid the risk of being affected by temporary redemption restrictions. Since real-market testing is not feasible, we use laboratory experiments to evaluate the effectiveness of redemption fees and gates in reducing money market fund runs, in a setting where investors may withdraw preemptively. We find that fees significantly reduce the propensity to run compared to the baseline without liquidity management tools, whereas gates do not lower the propensity to run. However, the effect of fees on withdrawal behavior is relatively small and takes some time to materialize. Overall, our experimental results indicate that preemptive runs are a real concern and that liquidity management tools are unlikely to eliminate fund fragility, which is consistent with the experience of the 2020 money market fund turmoil.</cb:description>
        </cb:resource>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Hubert János</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Kiss</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Hubert János Kiss</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Alfonso</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Rosa García</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Alfonso Rosa García</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:person rdf:parseType="Resource">
          <rdf:type rdf:resource="http://www.cbwiki.net/wiki/index.php/RSS-CB_1.2_RDF_Schema#Person" />
          <cb:givenName>Lukas</cb:givenName>
          <cb:surname>Voellmy</cb:surname>
          <cb:nameAsWritten>Lukas Voellmy</cb:nameAsWritten>
        </cb:person>
        <cb:byline>Hubert János Kiss, Alfonso Rosa García and Lukas Voellmy</cb:byline>
        <cb:publicationDate>2025</cb:publicationDate>
        <cb:publication>SNB Working Papers</cb:publication>
        <cb:issue>2025-10</cb:issue>
        <cb:JELCode>G01</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>G28</cb:JELCode>
        <cb:JELCode>C92</cb:JELCode>
      </cb:paper>
      <dc:date>2025-08-04T22:00:00Z</dc:date>
      <dc:language>de</dc:language>
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