Bluebook
Prefatory Note
The attached document represents the most complete and accurate version available based on original copies culled from the files of the FOMC Secretariat at the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. This electronic document was created through a comprehensive digitization process which included identifying the bestpreserved paper copies, scanning those copies, 1 and then making the scanned versions text-searchable. 2 Though a stringent quality assurance process was employed, some imperfections may remain. Please note that this document may contain occasional gaps in the text. These gaps are the result of a redaction process that removed information obtained on a confidential basis. All redacted passages are exempt from disclosure under applicable provisions of the Freedom of Information Act.
1
In some cases, original copies needed to be photocopied before being scanned into electronic format. All scanned images were deskewed (to remove the effects of printer- and scanner-introduced tilting) and lightly cleaned (to remove dark spots caused by staple holes, hole punches, and other blemishes caused after initial printing). 2 A two-step process was used. An advanced optimal character recognition computer program (OCR) first created electronic text from the document image. Where the OCR results were inconclusive, staff checked and corrected the text as necessary. Please note that the numbers and text in charts and tables were not reliably recognized by the OCR process and were not checked or corrected by staff.
February 3, 1989
Strictly Confidential (FR)
Class I FOMC
MONETARY POLICY ALTERNATIVES
Prepared for the Federal Open Market Committee By the staff
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
February 3, 1989
CLASS I - FOMC
MONETARY POLICY ALTERNATIVES Recent developments (1) Open market operations over the intermeeting period were complicated by continuing uncertainty about the relationship between borrowing and money market conditions.
Following the December 13-14 FOMC meet-
ing, reserve paths initially were constructed assuming $500 million of adjustment plus seasonal borrowing.
Federal funds moved up from the pre-
vailing 8-1/2 percent level to average 8-7/8 percent in the period ending December 28, although borrowing was only $380 million.
The borrowing
assumption was raised further to $600 million on January 5, in accordance with the Committee's decision at the December meeting, but heavy year-end recourse to the window pushed actual borrowing for the second maintenance period to $840 million.
In mid-January, based on historical evidence that
reluctance to borrow at the window typically rises markedly in the early part of the year, the Desk adopted an extra measure of flexibility toward the borrowing target.
Federal funds trading has centered between 9 and
9-1/8 percent in recent weeks; borrowing averaged $500 million over the maintenance period ending January 25 and around $250 million over the first eight days of the current period. (2) Prior to the release of strong January employment data, Treasury bill rates had risen only about 1/4 percentage point over the intermeeting period, as some firming in policy had been widely anticipated. Private short-term rates were unchanged or lower, reflecting as well the
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unwinding of year-end pressures.
After the employment report, money mar-
ket rates rose about 5 to 10 basis points, as markets seemed to anticipate some additional policy tightening in the near term.
Longer-term interest
rates have generally fallen 15 to 40 basis points and stock price indices have risen 7 to 10 percent on average; these markets benefited from generally strong demand for dollar assets apparently engendered in part by damped inflation expectations against a backdrop of actual and expected monetary policy restraint.
The further flattening of the yield curve has
nearly eliminated the spread between the investment yields on 30-year and 3-month Treasury securities, which had been around 65 basis points at the time of the last meeting. (3) The strength of the demand for dollar assets bolstered the dollar on foreign exchange markets, raising its weighted-average value by about 6-1/4 percent since the last Committee meeting.
The rise occurred
despite two releases of disappointing monthly trade data, sizable intervention sales of dollars, and two rounds of increases in official lending rates by European central banks.
As a consequence of the last, the dif-
ferential between U.S. Treasury bill interest rates and a weighted average of foreign short-term rates was little changed; foreign long-term rates rose moderately while U.S. bond rates fell. ,with the Desk accounting for $2.1 billion of this total. (4) Preliminary data indicate a pause in money growth in January after moderate increases in December.
For the two months combined, M2
growth averaged 2-1/2 percent, a bit below the Committee's expectation for
-3-
the November through March period, while M1 has been about flat.1
The
sluggish expansion of these aggregates appears to reflect recent increases in money market yields, which have widened the opportunity costs of holding deposits; this widening has been accentuated by slower-than-usual adjustment of most retail offering rates over recent months.
Administra-
tive pressure on some thrifts to restrain deposit pricing may be holding down their deposit rates and, by reducing competitive pressures, may be curbing increases in deposit rates generally.
Evidence of shifts from M2
balances may be seen in the large volume of noncompetitive tenders at recent Treasury auctions and in a resumption of inflows to stock and bond mutual funds.
Reflecting less aggressive pricing of thrift deposits, and
perhaps also some concerns about the resolution of this industry's problems, retail deposit flows at these institutions, which had slowed over the summer, have been especially weak in recent months.
M3 growth has
averaged 3-3/4 percent over the past two months, falling well short of expectations.
Banks' funding needs have not increased as rapidly as pro-
jected, owing mostly to a shortfall in business loans; weakness in these loans was accounted for partly by repayment of previous corporate restructuring loans and partly by subdued credit demands for non-merger-related purposes.
At thrifts, greater reliance on Federal Home Loan Bank advances
may have substituted for deposits. (5) Although business borrowing at banks was less than expected, commercial paper soared.
Problems in the investment-grade industrial bond
1. Monetary data presented in the bluebook incorporate benchmark and seasonal factor revisions, described briefly in the appendix. The revised data should be considered confidential until their release, planned for February 9.
MONETARY, CREDIT, AND RESERVE AGGREGATES
(Seasonally adjusted annual rates of growth)
November
December
January
November QIV '88 to to Januaryp January
Money and credit aggregates M1
2.0
5.5
-4.7
0.4
-0.2
M2
7.0
5.2
-0.4
2.4
2.7
M3
6.9
5.6
2.0
3.8
4.0
Domestic nonfinancial debt
8.7
8.3
7.9
8.1
8.2
Bank credit
6.0
0.1
2.5
1.3
2.3
1.5
-0.2
-13.7
-7.0
-6.7
Total reserves
1.9
-1.5
-10.3
-5.9
-5.3
Monetary base
3.9
5.0
4.7
4.9
4.7
539
472
640
1119
1038
1059
Reserve measures
2
Nonborrowed reserves
3
Memo: (Millions of dollars) Adjustment plus seasonal borrowing Excess reserves
p--preliminary. 1. Money stock data incorporate benchmark and seasonal factor revisions. 2. Monthly reserve measures, including excess reserves and borrowing, are calculated by prorating averages for 2-week reserve maintenance periods that overlap months. The January figures assume an average level of adjustment plus seasonal borrowing of $600 million and excess reserves of $1.2 billion for the reserve period ending February 8. Reserve data incorporate adjustments for discontinuities associated with changes in reserve requirements. 3. Includes "other extended credit" from the Federal Reserve.
-5-
market and expectations by some issuers that longer-term interest rates will decline may have shifted some issuers toward shorter-term debt.
Junk
bond issuance has been moderate, but a heavy flow stemming from impending deals is expected in the near future.
Consumer borrowing and mortgage
activity appear to have been well maintained.
Overall, domestic nonfinan-
cial debt appears to have grown in January near the pace of recent months.
Longer-run strategies (6) As background for the Committee's consideration of the ranges for 1989, projected effects of three alternative longer-run monetary policy strategies are presented below.
Strategy I is a baseline, embody-
ing the monetary policy and economic outlook of the greenbook forecast, extended judgmentally into 1991.
Strategies II and III are based on
somewhat tighter and somewhat easier monetary policies, respectively, as indexed by M2 growth that is one percentage point less and one percentage point more than in the baseline over each of the three years.
Staff
econometric models were used to derive deviations of the forecasts from the baseline under the two alternative policy strategies.
1988
1989
M2 (QIV to QIV) I (Baseline) II III
5-1/4
Prices: Fixed-weight deflator (QIV to QIV) I II III Real GNP (QIV to QIV) I II III
1990
1991
3-1/2 2-1/2 4-1/2
5 4 6
6 5 7
4-1/2
4-1/2 4-1/4 4-1/2
4-3/4 4 5-1/4
4-1/4 3-1/2 5-1/4
2-3/4 (3-1/2)
3 (2-1/4) 2 3-3/4
1 3/4 2-1/4
1-3/4 1-3/4 2
5-1/2 5-3/4 5-1/4
6 6-3/4 5-1/2
6-1/2 7-1/4 5-3/4
1
Unemployment rates (QIV) I II III
5-1/4
1. Drought-adjusted GNP in parentheses.
(7) Under the baseline of strategy I, policy exerts some restraint on output, putting in place conditions that lead to some moderation in the pace of inflation starting in 1991.
Given the rise in real interest rates
over the near term to a fairly high level, nominal rates can begin to edge off in the latter part of the forecast period, as inflation moderates. Even so, real rates remain high enough to keen real output below its potential.
The behavior of nominal rates means that velocity will level
out, and the associated acceleration of M2 growth is still consistent with restraint on inflation. (8) The tighter policy of strategy II would lead to quicker and larger decreases in inflation.
That result, however, involves still
higher real interest rates over the forecast horizon in order to induce a substantial slowing of output growth and an appreciable rise in unemployment to well above the rate associated with steady inflation--assumed to be around 5-3/4 percent in these simulations.
The level of the unemploy-
ment rate at the end of 1991 implies even greater progress against inflation in 1992, absent a sharp turnaround in policy.
The dollar would be
higher under this strategy than in the staff forecast.
The negative
effects of this on the improvement in trade, however, might be offset by the additional restraint on domestic demand and the better performance of prices and costs for U.S. producers. (9) The faster money growth of strategy III would avoid a marked slowing in economic growth, keeping the unemployment rate at or a little below its current level over the near term and allowing only a small rise through 1991. ing out.
Inflation accelerates substantially in 1990, before level-
Faster expansion of domestic demand tends to deepen external
imbalances, and the greater downward movement of the dollar contributes to the higher inflation.
Nominal interest rates initially are somewhat lower
under this strategy, but the pressure of faster income growth and higher inflation results in nominal rates equal to those under the other two strategies by 1991. (10)
The table below gives inflation projections for the three M2
paths based on the single-equation model relating the level of prices to M2 presented to the FOMC in November.
In this model, M2 determines a
long-run level of prices, assuming velocity and output are at their trend levels.
Inflation would accelerate or decelerate depending on whether
actual prices were below or above this long-run level.
The results of the
equation simulation tend to give a little more optimistic outlook for inflation under the three alternatives.
1988
1989
1990
1991
4-1/2
4-1/2 4-1/2 4-3/4
4-1/4 4 4-1/2
3-1/2 3 4-1/4
Prices: Fixed-weight deflator (QIV to QIV) I II III
Long-run ranges for 1989 (12)
The table below gives two alternative sets of ranges for
growth in M2, M3, and the debt of nonfinancial sectors from the fourth quarter of 1988 to the fourth quarter of 1989.
The ranges of alternative
I are those adopted on a tentative basis by the Committee in late June. Alternative II would reduce the money ranges somewhat further, more comfortably encompassing staff expectations for growth in M2 and M3 in the greenbook forecast, and allowing for the slower money growth strategy outlined in the previous section.
Alt. I (tentative ranges)
Alt. II
Memo: 1988 ranges
Growth from QIV '88 to QIV '89 M2 M3 Debt (13)
3 to 7 3-1/2 to 7-1/2 6-1/2 to 10-1/2
2 -1/2
to 6-1/2 3 to 7 6-1/2 to 10-1/2
4 to 8 4 to 8 7 to 11
The proposed alternatives retain the 4 percentage point widths
for all the ranges, first adopted last February. 2
The rationale for
widening the range for M2 rested primarily on the combined effects of the rather interest-sensitive nature of this aggregate over the one-year target period and uncertainty about levels of interest rates that would accompany pursuit of policy objectives over the year.
M3 and debt are
2. The report of the Senate Banking Committee following the July monetary policy hearings recommended that the ranges be narrowed. In addition, it implied that the ranges should be centered on the Committee's expected outcome, in that the Committee report asked for ex post explanations of any deviations from the center of the ranges. The report also recommended consideration of a range for the monetary base as a replacement for M1; a Board staff report summarizing material that served as a basis for earlier FOMC discussions of this issue was sent to the Banking Committee in December.
-10-
less sensitive to intermediate-term variations in interest rates.
How-
ever, some special uncertainties in the financial sector in 1989 might argue against narrowing any of the ranges.
As noted below, the approach
to resolving thrift difficulties could affect both M2 and M3.
In addi-
tion, the unpredictable outlook for corporate restructuring activity, which might be affected by, among other things, actual or proposed legislative action, adds to uncertainties with respect to growth of debt and M3. (14)
The staff expects that M2 growth of only 3-1/2 percent in 1989
will be associated with the greenbook forecast.
The sluggish growth of M2
is an aspect of the tighter monetary policy in the latter part of 1988 and the additional firming of interest rates in 1989 thought likely to be needed to contain inflation.
Although nominal GNP is projected to in-
crease 7 percent this year, the same as in 1988, the upward movement in rates and associated rise in opportunity costs are expected to increase M2 velocity 3-1/2 percent this year, compared with 1-1/2 percent last year. (See chart 1.)
A substantial part of the velocity increase would seem
already to be in train from the lagged effects of the interest rate increases that have occurred over the second half of 1988.
Even with no
additional increase in rates, velocity would be expected to rise nearly 3 percent in 1989.
The projection for M2 is a little below model fore-
casts for this aggregate, given greenbook income and market interest rates.
This is based on the assumption that the usual relationship of
deposit to market interest rates is not restored in 1989, leaving opportunity costs a bit higher than generated by the models.
Moreover, future
steps to deal with the thrift situation could further adversely affect
Chart 1
ACTUAL AND PROJECTED VELOCITY OF M2 AND M3* M2 VELOCITY Ratio scale -i 2.5
-42
-4 1.5
I1 1
I I I II
1960
1965
I
I iI I I I I I I I I I I I I Illll lllll l llll ---ll 1970
1975
1980
Li1
1990
1985
M3 VELOCITY
Ratio scale -- 2.5
-
2
-
1.5
'---a
I I I I I I I I 1I11 I1 I1 I1 I1 I1 I1 I1 I I1 I1 I1 I I1 I1 I1 Iill ill 1 11
1960
1965
1970
* Projectons me based on staf forecasts of GNP and money.
1975
1980
1985
ll
lill11 11 111111 1 1I *
1990
Chart 2
ACTUAL AND PROJECTED VELOCITY OF M1 AND DEBT* M1 VELOCITY Ratio scale
I I I I I I I I I II 1960
1965
I I I I I I I I I I I I I Itllllliiil11
1970
1975
1980
1985
DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL DEBT VELOCITY
1990
Ratio scale S1.25
-1
-
I I Il I I I I1 I1 I I1 I1 I1 I1 I I I1 I1 I I I I I I I IiiilttiliiiliiiliiiliiibJ i .1
f 1960
1965
1970
1975
' Projections ar bsed on staff forecats of GNP, money, and debt
1980
1985
199 0
0.75
0.5
-11-
returns on deposits, for example through an increase in insurance premiums . (15)
M3 growth also is expected to slow substantially this year--to
about a 4-3/4 percent pace--under the greenbook forecast.
This slowing
reflects a projected deceleration in asset expansion and associated funding needs at thrifts as well as greater reliance on managed liabilities outside M3 at all depository institutions as core deposit growth moderates.
At banks, credit growth is expected to be supported by increased
demands from businesses, which will be funding greater external credit needs from short-term sources in a rising rate environment.
Even so,
capital requirements will foster continued securitization and sale of loans, contributing to a slight moderation in credit growth at these institutions in 1989.
At thrifts, some easing in the demands for mortgage
credit together with administrative restraints on lending by insolvent or undercapitalized thrifts, should depress overall thrift asset growth appreciably.
The staff forecast has thrift credit growth slowing substan-
tially in 1989--to 6-1/4 percent from 7-3/4 percent in 1988--but risks may be on the side of even slower growth of assets and liabilities.
Moreover,
3. In assessing the demand for money, no special allowance has been made for any distorting effects of the recovery from the drought on nominal GNP. In terms of affecting the demand for money and velocity, such effects might go in offsetting directions. The lower level of spending relative to income as inventories were rebuilt might raise V2 growth to the extent demands for M2 were related to spending, but lower V2 growth to the extent that higher savings rates were associated with greater accumulation of financial assets. Conceptually, the retirement of equity in corporate restructurings may have boosted the demand for M2 by those receiving the proceeds. Aside from some short-run effects as funds are held temporarily in the process of completing these transactions, however, little effect of this phenomenon has been apparent, and no allowance in the M2 forecast has been made for the projected slackening of share retirements over coming quarters this year.
-12-
assistance to troubled thrifts from the government could substitute in part for deposit sources of funds.
Thrifts already have been using FSLIC
notes to collateralize FHLB advances, and any cash infusions might have similar effects on their appetite for deposits. (16)
Debt of domestic nonfinancial sectors is projected to grow
8-1/2 percent in 1989, marginally below its 1988 rate.
Federal borrowing
moderates a little, reflecting a drawdown of cash balances rather than a reduction of the deficit and underlying pressures on financial markets. Overall, nonfederal borrowing is projected to be maintained at about its 1988 pace.
In the corporate sector, borrowing is expected to strengthen
somewhat as the financing gap widens and corporate restructuring and equity retirement activity remains brisk, though trending down from the record pace in late 1988 and early 1989.
In the household sector, growth
of mortgage debt is expected to slow as higher interest rates restrain housing activity; consumer credit expansion also should moderate, in line with a smaller rise in outlays on consumer durables. (17)
Although alternative I encompasses staff money growth fore-
casts thought to be consistent with the greenbook economic projection for 1989, both M2 and M3 likely would be well down in the lower halves of their ranges.
Alternative II would more nearly center projected growth
within the annual ranges, although still involving some expected shortfall from the midpoints, especially for M2.
Alternative II affords more room
for unexpectedly slow money growth, for example should offering rates adjust even more sluggishly than the staff envisions.
Alternative II also
provides more scope for greater monetary policy tightening than in the staff forecast, should additional restraint on aggregate demand be needed
-13-
to check inflation pressures or should the Committee wish to make more progress against inflation than in the staff projection.
At the same
time, should constant or moderately declining interest rates prove consistent with satisfactory economic performance, the upper bound of alternative II would provide adequate room for the implied faster money growth. (18)
On the other hand, alternative I already represents reductions
in the M2 and M3 ranges for 1989 of 1 and 1/2 percentage point, respectively, from those for last year, and the Federal Reserve's resolve at least to resist any increase in inflation is not widely questioned.
More-
over, should a major initiative to close the deficit over time be forthcoming, market interest rates would come under downward pressure, and alternative I would better encompass the somewhat faster money growth needed should the System wish to assure that economic growth would not slacken over the near term.
Alternative I may be a more natural transi-
tion to the appropriate sequence of monetary ranges in future years, when nominal interest rates may not be rising and velocity would level out or even decline.
For example, in 1990 M2 and M3 are seen as accelerating to
5 and 5-1/2 percent, as interest rates are assumed to move lower later in the year.
If the Committee wishes to have scope to continue reducing the
ranges in 1990 and beyond, it may be desirable to avoid larger decreases at this time. (19) Under the staff forecast, M1 would be about unchanged on balance over 1989, as declines in demands for both demand deposits and NOW accounts, stemming from the projected rise in opportunity costs and declines in required compensating balances, are about offset by growth in currency in line with that of nominal GNP.
This currency growth would
-14-
support expansion in the monetary base over 1989 of 4-1/2 percent, 2-1/2 percentage points slower than last year.
-15-
Short-run policy alternatives (20)
The two near-term policy alternatives presented involve
adjustment plus seasonal discount borrowing of $600 million for alternative B with funds trading at around 9 percent or a bit above, and borrowing of $800 million for alternative C with funds 1/2 percentage point higher.
The funds rate that is likely to be associated with a particular
borrowing level and with the current 6-1/2 percent discount rate clearly has become harder to predict in light of the substantial downward shift in the borrowing relationship that started around mid-October of last year. Additional near-term uncertainties can be identified.
If the beginning-
of-year reluctance to borrow extends well into February or turns out to be a more fundamental shift, adhering to a given borrowing objective would be associated with somewhat higher federal funds rates.
However, some tem-
porary downward pressure on the funds rate relative to staff expectations might accompany the sizable boost to free reserves projected in coming weeks from market factors, as currency and required reserves decline seasonally and the Treasury balance runs off.
In addition, massive flows of
funds through the banking system in coming weeks, associated with payment for the RJR-Nabisco takeover and the Treasury's midquarter refunding, may contribute to temporary volatility in money market rates.
In light of
these considerations, it may be appropriate for the Desk to continue to view the borrowing assumption with some flexibility.
4. Since that time, the borrowing shortfall has averaged around $400 million, although it was even greater in the two maintenance periods ending December 14 and 28 and in the most recent period ending January 25. Anticipations of System tightening and year-end pressures in December and a usual beginning-of-year pullback in borrowing in January likely enlarged those shortfalls. Thus, the expected relationship assumes that only the average downward shift of approximately $400 million since mid-October will prove permanent.
-16-
(21)
Anticipated money growth rates from December to March are
shown in the table below for both alternatives, along with implied growth through March from the fourth-quarter base of the annual targets. (Detailed data are presented on the table and charts on the following pages.) Under both alternatives, M2 would remain around the lower bound of its 3 to 7 percent tentative annual range by March, while M3 would stay in the lower half of its 3-1/2 to 7-1/2 percent tentative annual range. Alt. B
Alt. C
Growth from December to March M2 M3 M1
2 3-1/2 -2
1-1/2 3-1/4 -2-3/4
Growth from QIV '88 to March M2 M3 M1
3 4-1/4 -1/2
2-3/4 4 -2-1/2
7 to 11
7-1/2 to 11-1/2
Associated federal funds rate range (22)
Short-term rates seem to have built in a further firming step
for policy in the near term.
With funds continuing to trade at or a
little above 9 percent, as expected under alternative B, some of the rate increases registered most recently may unwind, with Treasury bill rates moving back to around 8-3/8 percent or a little below.
Bond yields are
unlikely to move substantially, absent more indications of strength in the economy or intensifying pressures on prices.
As maintaining the reserve
pressures of alternative B causes international investors to begin reconsidering the likelihood of an imminent U.S. monetary policy tightening, the value of the dollar could begin to slip.
Alternative Levels and Growth Rates for Key Monetary Aggregates M1
M3
M2 Alt. B
Alt. C
Alt. B
Alt. C
Alt. B
Alt. C
3042.3 3060.0 3073.3
3042.3 3060.0 3073.3
3875.3 3897.6 3915.9
3875.3 3897.6 3915.9
785.4 786.7 790.3
785.4 786.7 790.3
3072.4 3080.8 3088.8
3072.4 3079.3 3085.7
3922.4 3937.8 3950.9
3922.4 3937.2 3948.7
787.2 786.6 786.4
787.2 786.0 785.0
2.8 7.0 5.2
2.8 7.0 5.2
5.3 6.9 5.6
5.3 6.9 5.6
2.6 2.0 5.5
2.6 2.0 5.5
-0.4 3.3 3.1
-0.4 2.7 2.5
2.0 4.7 4.0
2.0 4.5 3.5
-4.7 -0.9 -0.3
-4.7 -1.8 -1.5
Quarterly Ave. Growth Rates 1988 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 1989 Q1
6.2 6.9 3.8 3.8 2.9
6.2 6.9 3.8 3.8 2.7
6.8 7.2 5.5 4.9 4.2
6.8 7.2 5.5 4.9 4.1
3.2 6.3 5.2 2.4 -0.4
3.2 6.3 5.2 2.4 -0.7
Nov. 88 to Mar. 89 Dec. 88 to Mar. 89 Jan. 89 to Mar. 89
2.8 2.0 3.2
2.5 1.6 2.6
4.1 3.6 4.4
3.9 3.3 4.0
-0.1 -2.0 -0.6
-0.7 -2.7 -1.7
5.3 2.9 2.7 2.9 3.0
5.3 2.7 2.7 2.7 2.7
6.2 4.2 4.0 4.3 4.2
6.2 4.1 4.0 4.2 4.0
4.3 -0.4 -0.2 -0.4 -0.4
4.3 -0.7 -0.2 -0.7 -1.0
Levels in billions 1988 October November December 1989 January February March Monthly Growth Rates 1988 October November December 1989 January February March
Q4 Q4 Q4 Q4 Q4
87 88 88 88 88
to to to to to
Q4 88 Q1 89 Jan. 89 Feb. 89 Mar. 89
1988 Target Ranges: 1989 Ranges (Tentative):
4.0 to 8.0 3.0 to 7.0
4.0 to 8.0 3.5 to 7.5
Chart 3
ACTUAL AND TARGETED M2
Billions of dollars
3300
7%
Actual Level - -Estimated Level * Short-Run Atenatives
3250
The range for 199 Is th one doapld tentativly a the Jaiy mnwg.
3200
S3150
3100
*'
c
3050
,-'
O
N
1987
D
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
1988
A
S
O
N
- 3000
D
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
1989
A
S
O
-
2950
-
2900
I I D N
2850
Chart 4
ACTUAL AND TARGETED M3
Billions of dollars
4250 -
Actual Level
4200
--Estimated Level * Short-Run Altematives
4150
The range for 198e is te one adoped tentahvely al the Jiy mteag.
4100
4050 4000 3950 3900
3850
3800
3750
3700
3650
D
ON 1987
J
F
MA
M
J J 1988
A
S
ON
D
J
F
MA
M
J J 1989
A
S
ON
D
3600
Chart 5
M1
Billions of dollars
Actual Level -- Estimated Level ------ Growth From 1987.04 * Short-Run Altematives
----
15% -
--
--- '
860
840
10%
-- 820
800
5%
Se
780
c--
--
0
------
--- -
-
-----
-- 760
0% •,
I
.
..
i
a
a
1
1
m
I
a
I
I
I
I
I
O
N
1987
D
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
1988
A
S
O
N
D
I
I
1
1
I
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1 1
1
1
1
|
]
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
1989
A
S
O
N
D
Chart 6
DEBT
Billions of dollars
10200 --
Actual Level
* Projected Level 9900 The range or 1989 s M u on adoped Sentilvly a the y mn-e .
9600
-1 9300
-- 9000
--
8700
-- 8400
--
I O
i N
1987
I D
I
J
i
I
F
M
A
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
1988
I
D
I
J
I
F
I
M
I
A
I
M
I
J
I
J
1989
I
A
I
S
I
O
I
N
8100
7800 D
-18-
(23)
Increases in short-term market rates over recent months should
restrain M2 growth through this quarter under alternative B. Some rebound from a weak January seems in store in February and March, but M2 growth is expected to reach only about 3 percent over the next two months, given the glacial adjustment speed of offering rates recently, especially for liquid accounts.
5
With demand deposits expected to continue to run off in
February and March, M1 would decline slightly further.
The 2 percent M2
growth of alternative B from December to March implies quarterly average growth of only 3 percent for this aggregate.
M2 demand is not expected to
respond to the anticipated bulge in nominal GNP in the current quarter resulting from an imputed bounceback of farm activity from the drought last year.
Consistent with the GNP outlook in the greenbook, the income
velocity of M2 would increase this quarter at a 5-3/4 percent annual rate, nearly twice its rate of change over the second half of 1988. (24)
M3 growth under alternative B should strengthen from its
January lull to a 4-1/2 percent annual rate over February and March, bringing growth from December to March to a 3-1/2 percent annual rate. Total thrift deposits, flat in December and January, are expected to expand weakly over February and March, and S&Ls should continue their reliance on new FHLB advances and other non-M3 borrowing.
A bulge in bank
credit associated with financing of the RJR-Nabisco takeover, while other LBO and merger-related lending remains heavy, should induce substantial issuance of large CDs this month and next.
Corporate restructuring
5. Growth of M2 may be somewhat elevated in February, and depressed in March, by short-term placement of funds borrowed for the RJR-Nabisco buyout. These funds reportedly will be held in highly liquid instruments for a time prior to disbursement to shareholders.
-19-
activity also will be boosting overall debt issuance by domestic nonfinancial sectors for a time.
The debt aggregate is projected to grow at a
9-1/2 percent annual rate over the first quarter--somewhat faster than in 1988 and in the upper half of its tentative range.
Net equity retirements
are forecast at a record $200 billion annual rate for the quarter, while the corporate financing gap holds steady at around an $80 billion annual rate. (25)
The rise in the funds rate to around 9-1/2 percent or slightly
higher associated with discount borrowing of $800 million under alternative C would be larger than is currently built into market rates.
Short-
term rates would move up across the board, though by less than 1/2 percentage point, with the 3-month Treasury bill rate rising to around 8-3/4 percent.
The upward pressure on bond rates from market perceptions of a
higher path for short rates in the intermediate term might be largely offset by expectations that policy actions of this size and speed were likely to slow growth and reduce inflation.
Higher short-term rates
likely would induce some further firming of the exchange value of the dollar.
The increase in short-term rates would further damp expansion of
the monetary aggregates.
The projected 1-1/2 percent growth of M2 over
the first three months of the year under this alternative would place it in March a little below the lower bound of the cone associated with its tentative annual range, and the upward movement of rates is likely to keep M2 growth relatively damped into the spring.
M3 growth of about 3-1/4
percent from December to March would leave this aggregate just 1/2 percentage point above its tentative lower bound by quarter end.
-20-
Directive language (26)
Presented below for Committee consideration is draft language
relating to the ranges for 1989 and to the operating paragraph for the intermeeting period.
With respect to the long-run ranges, alternative
language is offered that would fold the M1 sentence into the first paragraph and apply to the broader aggregates as well as to M1 the notion that they are evaluated in light of conditions in the economy and financial markets.
This might be considered more consistent with the treatment of
the aggregates in the operational paragraph. The Federal Open Market Committee seeks monetary and financial conditions that will foster price stability over time, promote growth in output on a sustainable basis, and contribute to an improved pattern of international transactions.
In furtherance of these objec-
tives, the Committee at THIS [DEL: its]meeting ESTABLISHED [DEL: in it had established in late June reaffirmed]the ranges [DEL: February] for growth of ____ TO ____4 [DEL: to 8]percent for[DEL: both TO ____PERCENT FOR M3, measured from the fourth M2 and ____
1988]. 1987]to the fourth quarter of 1989 [DEL: quarter of 1988 [DEL: The monitoring range for growth of total domestic non7to also maintained]at ____TO ____[DEL: financial debt was SET[DEL: 11]percent for the year.
[DEL: Per 1989
the
Committee agreed on tentative ranges
for monetary growth, measured from the fourth quarter of 1988
tothe fourth quarter of 1989, of 3 to 7 percent
for M2 and 3-1/2 to 7-1/2 percent for M3.
The
Committee
-21-
set the associated monitoring range for growth of total domestic nonfinancial debt at 6-1/2 to 10-1/2 percent.
It was understood that all these ranges were provisional and that they would be reviewed in early 1989 in the light of intervening developments.] [No para]
The Committee AGAIN DECIDED [DEL: reaffirmed its
decision in February] not to establish a specific target [DEL:for 1988 and also decided not to set a tentative range] for M1 GROWTH IN 1989.
The behavior of this aggregate
[THE MONETARY AGGREGATES] will continue to be evaluated in the light of movements in its velocity [THEIR VELOCITIES], developments in the economy and financial markets, and the nature of emerging price pressures.
OPERATIONAL PARAGRAPH In the implementation of policy for the immediate future, the Committee seeks to DECREASE SOMEWHAT/ MAINTAIN/increase somewhat the existing degree of pressure on reserve positions.
Taking account of indica-
tions of inflationary pressures, the strength of the business expansion, the behavior of the monetary aggregates, and developments in foreign exchange and domestic financial markets, somewhat (SLIGHTLY) greater reserve restraint would (MIGHT), or (SOMEWHAT) slightly lesser reserve restraint (WOULD) might, be acceptable in
-22-
the intermeeting period.
The contemplated reserve con-
ditions are expected to be consistent with growth of M2 and M3 over the period from DECEMBER [DEL: November]through March at annual rates of about ____ AND ____ [DEL: 3 and 6-1/2]
percent, respectively.
The Chairman may call for Com-
mittee consultation if it appears to the Manager for Domestic Operations that reserve conditions during the period before the next meeting are likely to be associated with a federal funds rate persistently outside a range of ____ TO ____[DEL: 7to 11]percent.
APPENDIX MONEY STOCK REVISIONS
Measures of the money stock have been revised to incorporate the results of the annual benchmark and seasonal factor review. The attached tables compare growth rates of the old and the revised series. These data are to be regarded as strictly confidential until their release scheduled for February 9. Benchmark Revisions Deposits of commercial banks and thrifts have been benchmarked using call reports through June 1988 and incorporate revisions from other sources as well. The benchmark revisions had negligible impacts on monetary growth over 1988 and on the quarterly pattern of growth within the year. Seasonal Revisions The seasonal factor review continued to employ the X-11 ARIMA procedure. Although revisions to seasonal factors had little effects on the broad patterns of growth in 1988, some redistribution of growth occurred from the first to the second half of the year. Growth of M1 was increased by about 0.4 percentage point, M2 by 0.7 percent, and M3 by 0.5 percent, on a second quarter to fourth quarter basis.
Appendix Table 1
Comparison of Revised and Old M1 Growth Rates (percent changes at annual rates)
Revised (1)
Old (2)
1987--0ct. Nov. Dec.
15.1 -4.3 -3.7
14.0 -5.6
1988--Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. 1989--Jan.
Difference (1) - (2) (3)
I
Difference due to Benchmark Seasonals (I 4) (5)
Monthly
-3.0
1.1 1.3 -0.7
0.1 0.1 -0.2
1.0 1.2 -0.5
9.7 2.7 5.8 11.5 -0.2 8.4 9.3 0.0 2.0 2.6 2.0 5.5
12.8 1.1 5.4 11.3 0.2 9.8 9.0 0.3 -0.2 1.7 0.3 6.3
-3.1 1.6 0.4 0.2 -0.4 -1.4 0.3 -0.3 2.2 0.9 1.7 -0.8
0.2 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.2 0.4 0.5 -0.4 0.2 -0.1 0.1 0.0
-3.3 1.6 0.4 -0.1 -0.6 -1.8 -0.2 0.1 2.0 1.0 1.6 -0.8
-4.7
-1.2
-3.5
0.0
-3.5
Quarterly 1987--QIV
3.9
1.1
0.1
1.0
1988--QI QII QIII QIV
3.8 6.3 5.2 1.3
-0.6 0.0 0.0 1.1
0.0 0.2 0.2 0.0
-0.6 -0.2 -0.2 1.1
5.1
-0.3
-0.4
3.3
0.5
0.4
6.2 4.2
0.2 0.1
0.1 0.0
Semi-Annual 1988--QIV '87 to QII '88 QII '88 to QIV '88
Annual (OIV TO OIV) 1987 1988
Appendix Table 2 Comparison of Revised and Old M2 Growth Rates (percent changes at annual rates) | | I
Revised (1)
Old (2)
Difference (1) - (2) (3)
1987--Oct. Nov. Dec.
7.2 0.8 2.0
5.7 0.8 1.9
1.5 0.0 0.1
0.3 0.0 -0.1
1.2 0.0 0.2
1988--Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec.
8.7 8.4 7.6 8.5 3.8 5.2 4.3 2.3 2.1 2.8 7.0 5.2
10.1 8.6 8.7 9.5 4.5 5.7 3.7 2.3 1.0 1.3 7.0 4.9
-1.4 -0.2 -1.1 -1.0 -0.7 -0.5 0.6 0.0 1.1 1.5 0.0 0.3
0.0 0.5 -0.4 -0.3 -0.5 -0.2 -0.1 -0.6 -0.2 0.1 0.0 0.0
-1.4 -0.7 -0.7 -0.7 -0.2 -0.3 0.7 0.6 1.3 1.4 0.0 0.3
1989--Jan.
-0.4
1.2
-1.6
0.0
-1.6
1987--QIV
4.9
3.9
1.0
0.3
0.7
1988--QI QII QIII QIV
6.2 6.9 3.8 3.8
6.8 7.7 3.6 3.0
-0.6 -0.8 0.2 0.8
0.1 -0.2 -0.3 -0.1
-0.7 -0.6 0.5 0.9
1988--QIV '87 to QII '88
6.6
7.3
-0.7
-0.1
-0.6
QII '88 to QIV '88
3.8
3.3
0.5
-0.2
0.7
4.2 5.3
4.0 5.4
0.2 -0.1
0.2 -0.2
0.0 0.1
Difference due to Benchmark Seasonals (4) (5)
Monthly
Quarterly
Semi-Annual
Annual (OIV TO QIV) 1987 1988
Appendix Table 3 Comparison of Revised and Old M3 Growth Rates (percent changes at annual rates)
Old
Difference (1) - (2)
I
Revised
(1)
(2)
(3)
1
1987--Oct. Nov. Dec.
8.0 4.9 2.2
7.3 4.9 1.6
0.7 0.0 0.6
0.2 -0.2 -0.3
0.5 0.2 0.9
1988--Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec.
8.0 9.7 7.9 7.6 4.7 6.6 7.1 3.8 2.6 5.3 6.9 5.6
8.6 10.5 8.2 7.6 5.5 7.8 7.0 3.8 1.7 4.7 6.9 4.5
-0.6 -0.8 -0.3 0.0 -0.8 -1.2 0.1 0.0 0.9 0.6 0.0 1.1
0.0 0.3 0.4 -0.1 -0.5 -0.3 -0.3 -0.2 -0.2 -0.1 0.0 0.0
-0.6 -1.1 -0.7 0.1 -0.3 -0.9 0.4 0.2 1.1 0.7 0.0 1.1
1989--Jan.
2.0
2.6
-0.6
0.0
-0.6
1987--QIV
6.4
5.5
0.9
0.2
0.7
1988--QI QII QIII QIV
6.8 7.2 5.5 4.9
7.0 7.7 5.7 4.4
-0.2 -0.5 -0.2 0.5
- 1 0.0 -0.4 -0.1
-0.3 -0.5 0.2 0.6
1988--QIV '87 to QII '88
7.0
7.4
-0.4
0.0
-0.4
QII '88 to QIV '88
5.3
5.1
0.2
-0.3
0.5
5.7 6.2
5.4 6.4
0.3 -0.2
0.3 -0.1
0.0 -0.1
Difference due to Benchmark Seasonals (4) (S)
Monthly
Ouarterly
Semi-Annual
Annual (OIV TO OIV) 1987 1988
ry 6,
1989
SELECTED INTEREST RATES (percent) Short-Term
Lona- i arm
--- Treasury bills---secondary market--
federal funds 87--High Low
Monthly FEB 88 MAR 88 APR 88 AY 88 JUN 88 JUL 88 AUG 88 SEP 88 OCT 88 NOV 88 DEC 88 JAN 89
3 month
6 month
12 month
-U.S. Gov't. constant----- maturity yields-cds sec mkt 3-month
comm. paper 1-month
money market mutual fund
bank prime loan
3-year
10-year
conventional home-.ortgages sec mkt primary market
--
30-year
corp. A utility rec off
muni. Bond Buyer
fixedrate
fixedrate
ARM
7.62 5.95
6.84 5.24
7.36 5.36
7.64 6.40
8.49 5.83
8.12 5.88
6.70 5.28
9.25 7.50
9.29 6.37
9.96 7.03
9.97 7.34
11.50 8.79
9.59 6.92
11.98 8.97
11.58 9.03
8.45 7.47
8.87 6.38
8.16 5.61
8.26 5.81
8.40 6.15
9.33 6.58
9.41 6.50
8.18 6.03
10.50 8.50
9.16 7.33
9.36 8.16
9.42 8.40
10.73 9.63
8.34 7.64
11.33 9.98
10.81 9.84
8.54 7.49
6.58 6.58 6.87 7.09 7.51 7.75 8.01 8.19 8.30 8.35 8.76 9.12
5.66 5.70 5.91 6.26 6.46 6.73 7.06 7.24 7.35 7.76 8.07 8.27
5.93
6.21 6.28 6.56 6.90 6.99 7.22 7.59 7.53 7.54 7.87 8.32 8.37
6.60 6.63 6.92 7.24 7.51 7.94 8.35 8.23 8.36 8.78 9.25 9.20
6.55 6.57 6.80 7.07 7.41 7.72 8.09 8.09 8.12 8.38 9.31 9.03
6.22 6.04 6.09 6.20 6.51 6.77 7.06 7.40 7.50 7.64 8.00 8.33
8.51 8.50 8.50 8.84 9.00 9.29 9.84 10.00 10.00 10.05 10.50 10.50
7.38 7.50 7.83 8,24 8.22 8.44 8.77 8.57 8.43 8.72 9.11 9.20
8.21 8.37 8.72 9.09 8.92 9.06 9.26 8.98 8.80 8.96 9.11 9.09
8.43 8.63 8.95 9.23 9.00 9.14 9.32 9.06 8.89 9.02 9.01 8.93
9.75 9.91 10.23 10.61 10.41 10.40 10.45 10.26 10.11 10.12 10.08 10.09
7.83 8.08 8.22 8.30 8.14 8.15 8.16 7.96 7.78 7.80 7.88 7.63
10.02 10.12 10.44 10.73 10.62 10.64 10.87 10.62 10.41 10.56 10.98 10.97
9.89 9.93 10.20 10.46 10.46 10.43 10.60 10.48 10.30 10.27 10.61 10.73
7.61 7.52 7.58 7.71 7.85 7.84 8.01 8.14 8.12 8.15 8.39 8.55
8.40 8.50 8.71 8.92 9.23
8.19 8.27 8.38 8.45 8.53
7.55 7.56 7.60 7.68 7.75
10.00 10.00 10.00 10.00 10.21
8.34 8.53 8.71 8.87 8.99
8.69 8.85 8.93 9.06 9.13
8.79 8.92 9.03 9.12 9.13
10.02 10.08 10.20 10.20 10.15
7.64 7.77 7.86 7.93 7.96
10.37 10.53 10.64 10.70 10.79
10.12 10.24 10.31 10.39 10.44
8.11 8.14 8.14 8.21 8.26
5.91
6.21 6.56 6.71 6.99 7.39 7.43 7.50 7.86 8.22 8.36
Heekly NOV NOV NOV NOV NOV
2 88 9 88 16 88 23 88 30 88
8.36 8.31 8.26 8.33 8.44
7.36 7.50 7.83 7.97 7.96
7.48 7.66 7.90 8.01 8.08
7.51 7.68 7.90 8.00 8.08
OEC DEC DEC DEC
7 88 14 88 21 88 28 88
8.59 8.51 8.87 8.86
7.97 8.00 8.16 8.13
8.16 8.25 8.23 8.26
8.18 8.34 8.40 8.33
9.22 9.27 9.33 9.21
9.26 9.27 9.41 9.30
7.85 7.95 8.09 8.18
10.50 10.50 10.50 10.50
9.00 9.10 9.16 9.16
9.05 9.10 9.13 9.12
9.05 8.98 9.02 8.96
10.02 10.15 9.98 10.12
7.96 7.94 7.82 7.71
10.72 11.08 11.00 11.33
10.46 10.71 10.68 10.77
8.35 8.43 8.45 8.45
JAN JAN JAN JAN
4 89 11 89 18 89 25 89
9.22 9.08 9.13 9.06
8.16 8.28 8.24 8.25
8.28 8.46 8.34 8.29
8.40 8.49 8.33 8.27
9.17 9.23 9.24 9.17
9.18 9.04 9.04 9.00
8.39 8.28 8.35 8.37
10.50 10.50 10.50 10.50
9.23 9.33 9.17 9.11
9.19 9.25 9.06 8.99
9.05 9.06 8.90 8.84
10.19 10.11 10.05 10.00
7.73 7.66 7.55 7.56
11.19 10.99 10.92 10.78
10.80 10.81 10.71 10.60
8.53 8.54 8.58 8.54
FEB 1 89
9.16
8.34
8.38
8.34
9.18
9.03
8.40
10.50
9.13
8.99
8.81
10.10
7.58
10.85
10.55
8.56
Daily JAN 27 89 FEB 2 89 FEB 3 89
9.17 9.03
8.33 8.38 8.48
8.35 8.41 8.52
8.31 8.36 8.48
9.18 9.19 9.25
9.02 9.03 9.06
10.50 10.50 10.50
9.09 9.12 9.19p
8.95 8.98 9.01p
8.76 8.82
9.04p
8.84p
NOTE: Neekly data for columns 1 through 11 are statement week averages. Data in column 7 are taken from Donoghue's Money Fund Report. Columns 12, 13 and 14 are 1-day quotes for Friday, Thursday or Friday, respectively, following the end of the statement week. Column 13 is the Bond Buyer revenue index. Column 14 is the FNMA purchase yield, plus loan servicing fee, on 30-day mandatory delivery commitments. Column 15 is the average contract rate on new commitments for contract rate on new fixed-rate mortgages(FRMs) with 80 percent loan-to-value ratios at a sample of savings and loans. Column 16 is the average initial commitments for 1-year, adjustable-rate mortgages(ARMs) at S&Ls offering both FRMs and ARMs with the same number of discount points.
Strictly
Money and Credit Aggregate Measures
III Class
Seasonally adjusted
Period
Mt
QUARTERLY AVERAGE 1988-1st QTR. 1988-2nd QTR. 1988-3rd QTR. 1988-4th QTR. MONTHLY 1988-JAN. FEB. MAR. APR. MAY JUNE JULY AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV. DEC. 1989-JAN.
pe
NEEKLY 1988-DEC.
1989-JAN.
2 9 16 p 23 p
.1.
1.
M3
L
loans and investment
5
s
7
a
in M3 only 4
6, 1989 Domestic nonfinancial debt'
Bank credit
Itotal
OMC
U.S government'
olher'
lotal'
9
10
2
in M2 3
15.6 6.2 4.2
9.4 4.0 5.4
7.4 3.3 5.8
8.2 11.2 10.0
9.1 5.4 6.4
8.3 5.3
9.7 7.9 7.2
14.7 8.9 8.1
12.9 10.0 9.0
13.3 9.8 8.7
3.8 6.3 5.2 1.3
6.8 7.7 3.6 3.0
7.8 8.2 3.1 3.6
8.1 7.4 13.7 9.4
7.0 7.7 5.7 4.4
6.8 9.1 7.2
5.3 11.1 7.3 4.4
8.0 8.2 7.3 7.9
8.2 8.9 9.0 8.5
8.1 8.7 8.6 8.4
12.8 1.1 5.4 11.3 0.2 9.8 9.0 0.3 -0.2 1.7 0.3 6.3
10.1 8.6 8.7 9.5 4.5 5.7 3.7 2.3 1.0 1.3 7.0 4.9
9.2 11.2 9.8 8.8 6.1 4.3 1.8 3.1 1.4 1.2 9.3 4.5
3.1 17.7 6.2 0.6 9.4 15.9 19.6 9.3 4.0 17.1 6.4 2.7
8.6 10.5 8.2 7.6 5.5 7.8 7.0 3.8 1.7 4.7 6.9 4.5
10.5 8.6 7.3 11.9 8.7 4.5 11.5 5.4 1.7 5.1 9.2
6.1 10.3 9.1 11.6 12.5 10.3 6.3 7.2 -0.7 7.1 6.0 0.1
4.0 10.6 15.1 7.1 2.7 6.0 5.8 10.5 12.2 5.1 6.7 7.6
7.4 7.9 7.5 9.2 10.0 9.0 9.1 8.8 7.8 8.2 9.3 8.4
6.6 8.6 9.3 8.7 8.3 8.3 8.3 9.2 8.8 7.5 8.7 8.3
2059.0 2079.9 2088.7 2100.4 2113.7
6698.6 6742.1 6788.4 6841.0 6889.1
-1
LEVELS ($BILLIONS) : MONTHLY 1988-AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV. DEC.
nontransactions components
M2
1
ANN. GROHTH RATES (%l ANNUALLY (14TO Q4) 1986 1987 1988
FEB.
stock measures and liquid assets
___ _Money
ConfidentialF(FR)
2
1
7
2249.2 2251.8 2254.0 2271.5 2280.0
816.9 819.6 831.3 835.7 837.6
3848.5 3853.8 3868.8 3890.9 3905.4
3067.5 3066.7
2280.9 2280.1 2281.8 2280.1
836.1 839.5 838.5 835.5
3903.9 3907.1 3906.0 3902.2
3070.5 3064.6 3070.4 3072.6
2277.4 2278.3 2286.9 2286.7
838.0 840.8 843.7 842.4
3908.6 3905.4 3914.2 3914.9
782.5 782.4 783.5 783.7 787.8
3031.6 3034.2 3037.5 3055.2
786.9 787.5 785.7 786.6
3067.8
793.1 786.3 783.6 785.8
3067.8
3067.6
U
.L _________________ U
3
3
4582.6 4589.2 4608.8 4644.0
U
2374.9 2373.6 2387.5 2398.1 2398.3
U _________________L
Debt data are on a monthly average basis, derived by averaging end-of-month levels of adjacent months, discontinuities. p-preliminary pe-preliminary estimate
U
8757.6 8822.1 8877.1 8941.3 9002.8
I.
and have been adjusted to remove
Strictly Confidential (FR)
Components of Money Stock and Related Measures
II Class FOMC
seasonally adjusted unless otherwise noted
Period
Curency
Demand dipeeiu
Other checkable deposits
Overnight RPs and Eurodollars
MMOAI NSA
Small donmi nation time
Savings depositl
NSA' __
LEVELS I*BILLIONSI : ANNUALLY 14TH QTR. 1986 1987 1988
1. 2. 3. 4.
4
_ ______________ ____dealer' 5
deposits'
and brokers
only
7
8
9
Large denominalion time depositl'
Term RPe NSA'
10
Savings bonds
Shortterm Treasury
Commerclal paper'
42
13
14
45
11 t
504.9
207.6 219.7 236.7
84.7 87.2 86.5
441.5 479.2 532.6
82.6 109.8 124.4
81.0 92.2 101.7
89.7 99.4
77.9
525.2
414.3
913.1
221.1
89.6
484.7
108.9
90.8
263.3 265.0 266.9
82.9 78.3 75.0
524.1 522.6 524.7
414.4 416.2 419.8
924.6 941.5 953.5
225.2 231.0 234.8
94.4 98.7 97.4
482.6 488.6 490.3
109.6 113.9 111.7
290.2 287.4 289.9
270.1 271.9 274.4
76.1 80.7 81.0
523.3 519.6 522.3
422.7 425.1 429.0
964.8 972.0 974.9
235.8 231.8 228.9
91.9 90.0 86.3
492.1 495.4 501.8
114.3 120.6 123.8
206.3 207.2 208.5
290.6 290.1 288.4
278.2 278.0 278.2
77.8 80.1 77.6
521.1 517.0 510.7
432.0 434.2 433.4
978.5 985.7 997.4
229.6 230.8 230.8
84.8 84.0 83.7
509.4 515.3 523.9
209.5 210.3 211.7
288.6 286.9 288.1
278.0 279.1 280.5
76.0 75.2 79.9
506.8 505.9 502.0
431.2 433.6 431.6
1009.9 1019.0 1027.1
231.2 238.0 240.8
84.6 87.4 87.6
530.7 532.1 534.9
MONTHLY 1987-DEC.
196.5
288,0
1988-JAN. FEB. MAR.
198.4 199.3 200.9
289.9 287.8 287.9
APR. MAY JUNE
202.5 203.6 204.9
JULY AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV. DEC.
228.6 259.7 279.2
528.9
858.9
6,
1989
Bank. accp tanc
1curllle
____
6
Term Eurodollars NSA'
899.4 1018.7
294.6 291.7 287.9
569.2
Money market mutual lunds NSA general Institupurpose lions
362.2 415.4 432.1
179.3 194.9 210.5
77.9 81.1 77.0
FEB.
283.8 267.9
228.5 255.2
37.8 45.1
100.2
260.1
258.9
45.7
85.4 85.5 90.0
101.4 102.6 103.5
262.5 258.3 252.8
269.0 274.1 280.3
43.6 40.9 40.6
89.1 91.8 93.1
104.6 105.4 106.1
263.5 265.1 256.6
288.2 301.1 301.2
41.2 40.9 40.6
125.0 123.1 121.5
96.2 102.3 101.4
106.9 107.4 107.7
266.5 273.1 278.0
311.5 312.5 307.9
40.6 41. 1 41.9
123.9 126.6 122.8
99.1 102.2 103.9
108.3 108.4
281.3 282.9
309.2 321.0
41.3 40.8
Net of money market mutual fund holdings of these items. Includes retail repurchase agreements. All IRA and Keogh accounts at comercial banks and thrift institutions are subtracted from mall Excludes IRA and Keogh accounts. Nat of large denomination time deposits held by money market mutual funds and thrift institutions. p-preliminary
time deposits.
1 NET CHANGES IN SYSTEM HOLDINGS OF SECURITIES Millions of dollars, not seasonally adjusted
February 6, 1989 Treasury bills Net purchases
Period
CLASS II-FOMC
Treasury coupons 3 I Net purchase within 1-year
I
1-5
5-10
over 10
Rde)ption. (-)
Not change
Feceral agencies redemptions (-)
Net change outright holdings total
Net
1sf
15,468 11,479 18,096 20,099 12,933 7,635
2,400 7,700 3,500 1,000 9,029 2,200
13,068 3,779 14,596 19,099 3,905 5,435
484 826 1,349 190 3,358 2,177
1,896 1,938 2,185 893 9,779 4,686
890 236 358 236 2,441 1,404
383 441 293 158 1,858 1,398
3,566 3,440 4,185 1,476 17,366 15,099
16,342 6,964 18,619 20,178 20,994 14,513
-5,445 1,450 3,001 10,033 -11,033 1,557
1987--Q3 04
4,690 4,334
8,229
-3,539 4,334
143 1,449
2,356 2,639
619 596
493 445
3,610 5,059
12 9,323
-1,433 2,533
1988--Q1 02 03 04
319 423 1,795 5,098
2,200
-1,881 423 1,795 5,098
1,092
-800 3,661
-175 1,017
-975 6,737
1,084
1,824
562
3,903
-3,011 7,030 1,717 8,776
-3,514 5,220 1,393 -1,541
3,903
515 -10 1,280 300 3,585 4,892
-5,941 -1,655 8,989 -6,150 3,096 1,512
-925
-6,813
323 2,985 -14 60 278
1,627 -1,362 1,341 -1,160 5,629
3,468 75 260
3,518 693 352 230
-4,050 -2,601 3,351 3,094
100
100 -20 -282
4,882 -4,141 -6,394 4,259
-653
-3,729
1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988
1989--January
--
515 -1,280
1,280 375 3,599 1,125
--
-154
600
--
375 -3,599 1,125
323 2,985
323 2,985
60 278
60 278
Dec.
7 14 21 28
50 702 92 281
50 702 92 281
Jan.
4 11 18 25
Feb.
1,824
562
-3
-20
1,824
--
-20 -134 i00
1
LVEL (bil.$)' February 1
1,084
-754
2 9 16 23 30
Nov.
Memo:
2,200
515
1988--July August Septmber October November December
c
Redemption. (-)
o Nt Net change
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
I
-117.1
Change froam nd-of-pariod to end-of-pariod. Outright transactions in market and with foreign accounts. Outright transactions in market and with foreign accounts, short-trm notes acquired in exchange for maturing bills. maturity shifts and rollovers of maturing coupon issues.
-20
-3
-630
55.5
and Excludes
12.7
-23
26.9
120.9
244.8
seurt2es 4. Reflect net change and redmptions (-) of Treasury and agency securities. 5. Includes change in RPs (+), matched sale-purchase transactiona (-), and matched purchase sale transactions (+). 6.
The level
as follows:
of agency issues were
within 1-year 2.3
1-5
5-10
3.3
1.0
fl7TI over 10 .2
total 6.8
Cite this document
Federal Reserve (1989, February 7). Bluebook. Bluebooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/bluebook_19890208
@misc{wtfs_bluebook_19890208,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Bluebook},
year = {1989},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Bluebooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/bluebook_19890208},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}