bluebooks · May 17, 1993

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.

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) May 14, 1993

Class I - FOMC

MONETARY POLICY ALTERNATIVES Recent developments (1)

The degree of pressure on reserve positions was left un-

changed over the intermeeting period.

Federal funds generally traded in

the 3 percent area, despite the complications to Desk reserve management posed by shortfalls in individual nonwithheld taxes, which showed through to the Treasury balance, and by revisions to forecasts of required reserves.

The allowance for adjustment plus seasonal borrowing

was raised $50 million in two steps to $100 million, reflecting an increase in seasonal credit.

After spiking at the March quarter-end,

borrowing returned to around its allowance, before moving noticeably above it in the last complete maintenance period. (2)

Short-term interest rates were narrowly mixed on balance

over the intermeeting period, while most longer-term market rates increased 10 to 20 basis points.

Early in the period, long rates backed

up sharply as data on hourly earnings and commodity prices sparked inflation fears.

These yields subsequently declined as signs of more

favorable price behavior and a much slower pace of economic expansion more than countered increasing doubts about the prospects for additional fiscal restraint.

Late in the intermeeting period, bond rates again

moved higher in response to unfavorable inflation readings.

On the

other hand, the interest rate on thirty-year fixed-rate mortgages has fallen 15 basis points since the March meeting; its latest quote is only

1. Security prices were little affected by the Treasury's announcement in early May of its plans to shorten average debt maturities. Although some cutback in bond issuance had been anticipated, the announced reduction was larger than most participants appear to have expected; on the other hand, with the semi-annual auction of the thirty-year bond starting in August and raised to about $11 billion, the near-term supply of bonds will be heavier than had been expected.

a bit above its recent 20-year low.

Quality spreads for most other

private rates were little changed, but they improved somewhat for speculative-grade issues.

Stock prices were mixed over the period.

Bank

stocks dropped substantially, reflecting in part market perceptions that net interest margins could narrow, especially in the absence of a pickup in loan demands. (3)

The dollar's weighted average exchange value declined by

almost 3 percent, on balance, over the intermeeting period, reflecting a variety of factors, including a less optimistic view regarding the prospects for U.S. economic expansion.

The dollar has dropped more than 4

percent on balance against the yen.

A variety of statements by offi-

cials.in Japan and the United States fostered some market confusion for a time and contributed to a strengthening of the yen.

But a little of

the weaker tone of the dollar has dissipated since April 27, when the Desk bought $200 million against yen for the accounts of the System and the ESF in an effort to calm the market before the G-7 meeting on April 29,

and key U.S. officials publicly clarified their position.

The Bank

of Japan purchased nearly $7 billion for its own account in April and early May.

Japanese short-term rates were little changed.

Other short-

term interest rates continued to move lower, with three-month German rates falling nearly 50 basis points; French rates fell dramatically (over 300 basis points) with the passing of devaluation fears after the French election.

Long-term interest rates rose in Japan, the United

Kingdom, and Canada, were little changed in Germany, and generally declined elsewhere.

The price of gold rose 10-1/2 percent;

reported

reasons for the increase include inflation concerns in the United States, rising demand from China and elsewhere in Asia, and supply developments in Russia and South Africa.

(4)

Over March and April, M2 fell at a 1/2 percent rate com-

pared with the 1-1/2 percent rate of growth that was projected in the last bluebook, while M3 was unchanged, about as anticipated.

Iden-

tifiable temporary factors accounted for most of the shortfall from the M2 forecast.

Rather than washing out over March and April as foreseen

in the last bluebook, these factors represented a depressant.

In par-

ticular, individual nonwithheld tax payments in April came in well below last year's level, rather than well above it, as had been expected.3 Hence, M2 was restrained by a slower buildup of liquid deposits in April than implied by typical seasonal patterns.

Abstracting from temporary

factors, the modest underlying growth of M2 over March and April was only a bit below earlier expectations.

Continued shifting to capital

market instruments doubtless held back underlying monetary expansion. Inflows to bond and stock mutual funds were at a near-record pace in March and reportedly were heavy in April. (5)

Broad money has surged in the two weeks ended May 10--M2

by $35 billion and M3 by $30 billion based on preliminary data--to levels well above those embodied in the March bluebook.4

The burst

in liquid deposits in early May in part reflected unusually small drawdowns to pay taxes.

In addition, a resurgence in mortgage refinancing

activity, which had begun to boost the aggregates in April, evidently

2. Over March and April, M1 grew at a 5-3/4 percent rate, somewhat below the March bluebook projection. With total reserves advancing at

a 3 percent rate and currency at a 9-1/4 percent pace, the monetary base continued to expand at an 8-1/4 percent rate over the two months. 3. A boost to April M2 growth had been expected because households were thought likely to build up balances to pay unusually high nonwithheld taxes. A spike in tax payments in January was thought to presage another surge in April, resulting from shifts in bonus payments and other income into 1992. In fact, nonwithheld payments were unusually low in April, as a tightening of penalties for insufficient estimated tax payments apparently resulted in a greater shift of payments from April to January than earlier estimated. 4. M1 accounted for $25 billion of these increases, also moving above its bluebook projection.

intensified in early May. the surge.

But these factors can explain only some of

Underlying M2, which had been flat on balance from the

fourth quarter through April, thus seems to have strengthened in early May to a level higher than anticipated in the last bluebook, despite weaker-than-expected nominal GDP in the second quarter.

Although it is

possible that the build-up is primarily noise, the burst also could signify a waning of the forces that have contributed to the weakness in underlying M2 relative to nominal spending in recent quarters.

Even

with this early May surge, though, M2 has grown at only a 1/4 percent annual rate from the fourth quarter of 1992 through the week of May 10, while M3 still has fallen, leaving both aggregates below their target cones but above their lower parallel bands. (6)

(See charts.)

Bank credit growth picked up to a 5-1/4 percent rate over

March and April, reflecting acquisitions of securities. further in March, bank lending edged higher in April.

After declining Business loans,

however, continued to fall rapidly in April, about offsetting stepped-up offerings of commercial paper by nonfinancial firms.

Larger nonfinan-

cial firms continued to draw on proceeds of brisk equity and debt issuance to pay down loans.

Business loans at small banks posted a

third month of gains in April.

The May Senior Loan Officer Survey

showed some further relaxation of price and non-price terms for business loans, as well as a modest easing of standards, including the first signs of easier standards for large firms. (7)

The overall net borrowing of nonfinancial businesses has

remained sluggish, owing to limited capital outlays relative to internal funds and heavy net equity issuance.

Enhanced incentives to use credit

cards for transactions may have contributed to a pickup in growth of consumer installment credit through March and a sharp rise in consumer

Chart 1

Billions of Dollars

3800 -

Actual Level Preliminary Estimate for May 10 3750

Weekly

3700

3650

3600

3550 t

3500

3450

3400

O

N 1992

D

J

F

M

A

M

J J 1993

A

S

O

N

D

J F 1994

3350

Chart 2

Billions of Dollars

4450 -

Actual Level Preliminary Estimate for May 10

--- 4400

Weekly

4350

4300 ''

4250

4200

4150

4100

4050

O

N 1992

D

J

F

M

A

M

I

J 1993

A

S

O

N

D

J F 1994

4000

Chart 3

M1 Billions of Dollars

1240

-

-Actual Level ---Preliminary Estimate for May 10

-

1220

-

1200

Weekly 15%

S1180

1160

- 1140

10%

S1120

- 1100

.--

1080

•.5%

S-

1060

1040

S.. ............................................................................

1020 1020

0% -

1000

- 980

-

960

940 O

N 1992

D

J

F

M

A

M

J J 1993

A

S

O

N

D

J

F 1994

-5-

loans at banks in April.

State and local governments in April continued

to issue an exceptional volume of debt, mainly for refundings.

Total

nonfederal debt growth, at a 3-3/4 percent rate in March, about matched its growth from the fourth quarter to that month.

Federal debt growth

has risen in recent months on a seasonally adjusted basis, reflecting lower tax receipts this year.

Total domestic nonfinancial debt is

estimated to have expanded at a 6-1/2 percent rate in March, bringing growth from the fourth quarter through March to a 5 percent rate--a little above the lower bound of its monitoring range for 1993.

MONEY, CREDIT, AND RESERVE AGGREGATES (Seasonally adjusted annual rates of growth) QIV to April1

Mar.

Apr.

M1

2.7

9.0

6.1

M2

-1.0

0.1

-1.6

M3

-1.7

1.9

-2.3

Domestic nonfinancial debt Federal Nonfederal

6.6 14.9 3.7

----

5.2 10.0 3.5

Money and credit aggregates

Bank credit

5.4

5.0

Nonborrowed reserves 2

4.3

1.2

Total reserves

5.3

0.8

Monetary base

8.9

7.5

91

73

1213

1101

3.0

Reserve measures

Memo:

(Millions of dollars) Adjustment plus seasonal borrowing

Excess reserves

1. QIV to March for debt aggregates. 2. Includes "other extended credit" from the Federal Reserve. NOTE:

Monthly reserve measures, including excess reserves and borrowing, are calculated by prorating averages for two-week reserve maintenance periods that overlap months.

Policy alternatives (8)

Three policy alternatives are presented below for con-

sideration by the Committee.

Under alternative B, federal funds would

continue to trade around 3 percent, in association with the allowance for adjustment and seasonal borrowing initially being maintained at its current level of $100 million. 5

Under alternative A, the federal

funds rate would be reduced to 2-1/2 percent.

This reduction could be

achieved either by lowering the initial borrowing allowance by $25 million or by reducing the discount rate 1/2 percentage point while leaving the allowance unchanged at $100 million.

Federal funds would

trade in the neighborhood of 3-1/2 percent under alternative C, in association with an initial borrowing allowance of $125 million. (9)

In light of recent price reports, market participants now

generally seem to expect that the next change in the stance of monetary policy is somewhat more likely to be toward tightening than toward ease, but few appear to anticipate any move immediately after the May FOMC meeting.

Thus, market interest rates are unlikely to react to the

implementation of alternative B.

The odds are that bond yields will

retrace at least some of their recent back-up if--as anticipated in the greenbook forecast--the news on inflationary pressures proves more favorable.

The ongoing budget debates and the prospective announcement

of the Administration's health reform plan suggest that the volatility associated with an uncertain fiscal outlook may persist.

Shorter-term

rates could rise some with the approach of larger auction volumes of bills and shorter-term notes.

The value of the dollar on foreign

5. Further increases in the allowance for borrowing likely will be needed over the intermeeting period to account for expected growth in the demand for seasonal credit during the late spring.

exchange markets probably would remain around current levels under alternative B. (10)

The 1/2 percentage point reduction in the federal funds

rate under alternative A would surprise market participants and should show through almost completely to other short-term interest rates.

The

three-month bill rate would fall to around 2-1/2 percent, and the prime rate probably would be reduced to 5-1/2 percent.

With the economy

likely to exhibit a bit more strength than otherwise over the intermediate run as a result of the easing, banks may feel a little more confident about the ability of borrowers to repay loans.

As a result,

banks might further ease other terms and standards on lending.

Risk

premiums in short- and long-term market interest rates, already historically narrow, would probably remain around their current levels.

Any

initial decline in longer-term yields could be limited by concerns that the easier monetary policy stance indicated more emphasis on supporting the economic expansion and less emphasis on containing inflation, particularly against the backdrop of the recent disappointing wage and price behavior and uncertainty regarding the outcome of the fiscal policy debate.

Absent corresponding actions abroad to ease monetary

policy, downward pressure on the foreign exchange value of the dollar would resume. (11)

Market participants also would be surprised by the policy

tightening under alternative C at this FOMC meeting.

Bond yields may

well increase, but with the rise probably tempered by the sense that the Federal Reserve was moving promptly to head off a resurgence of inflation.

Bill rates likely would jump by nearly the increase of 50 basis

points in the federal funds rate, and private money market rates could rise a bit more, reflecting widening risk premiums.

Banks would likely

boost the prime rate by 1/2 percentage point.

Bank stock prices, which

have benefited from wide spreads between short-term deposit rates and rates on longer-term assets, likely would extend their recent declines. Overall stock price indexes probably would drop as well, and the resulting capital losses on bonds and stocks could restrain inflows to longterm mutual funds, at least temporarily.

The dollar would strengthen on

foreign exchange markets.

Alt. A

Alt. B

Alt. C

6 4-1/4 18-1/2

5-3/4 4 18

5-1/2 3-3/4 17-1/2

4 2-1/2 12-3/4

3-1/2 2-1/4 12

3 2 11-1/4

Growth from April to June M2 M3 M1 Growth from April to September M2 M3 M1

(12)

The table above presents monetary growth rates over May

and June thought consistent with these three alternatives;

projections

for the April-to-September period also are shown, assuming the money market conditions of the three alternatives are maintained over the summer.

(More detailed data are presented in the table and charts on

the following pages.)

Under all the alternatives, M2 would be just a

bit above its fourth-quarter level at midyear and would strengthen only marginally further by September, thus staying noticeably below its 2 to 6 percent annual range.

From its fourth-quarter base, M3 is projected

to show a contraction through June but little change by September under all the alternatives, hence also remaining below its 1/2 to 4-1/2 percent range.

Alternative Levels and Growth Rates for Key Monetary Aggregates

Alt. A

Alt. B

Alt. C

Alt. A

Alt. B

Alt. C

Alt. A

Alt. B

Alt. C

Levels in billions 1993 March April

3472.4 3472.8

3472.4 3472.8

3472.4 3472.8

4128.9 4135.6

4128.9 4135.6

4128.9 4135.6

1035.4 1043.2

1035.4 1043.2

1035.4 1043.2

May June July August September

3496.0 3507.6 3520.6 3526.0 3530.9

3495.7 3505.9 3517.0 3520.8 3524.6

3495.4 3503.8 3513.0 3515.2 3518.0

4158.7 4164.2 4175.0

4158.0 4162.2 4171.2 4172.6 4174.0

4157.7 4160.8 4168.1 4168.1 4168.4

1064.8 1075.5 1085.8

1064.3 1073.7

1098.2

1064.6 1074.7 1083.9 1089.3 1094.8

2.7 9.0

2.7 9.0

2.7 9.0

11.5 7.0 6.8

24.6 11.4 10.3 6.0 6.0

24.3 10.6 9.4 5.3 5.5

Monthly Growth Rates 1993 March April May June July August September Quarterly Ave. Growth Rates 1992 Q4 1993 Q1 Q2 Q3 Mar Apr Apr Jun Q4 Q4 Q4 Q4 Q4

93 93 93 93 92 92 92 92 92

to to to to to to to to to

Jun Jun Sep Sep

93 93 93 93

Q2 93 Q3 93 Apr 93 Jun 93 Sep 93

1993 Target Ranges:

4177.8

4180.2

1092.1

1082.1

1086.8 1091.8

-1.0 0.1

-1.0 0.1

-1.0 0.1

-1.7 1.9

-1.7 1.9

-1.7 1.9

8.0 4.0 4.5 1.9 1.7

7.9 3.5 3.8 1.3 1.3

7.8 2.9 3.2 0.8 1.0

6.7 1.6 3.1 0.8 0.7

6.5 1.2 2.6 0.4 0.4

6.4 0.9 2.1 0.0 0.1

2.7

-0.2

1.5 3.4

2.7 -2.0 1.4 2.8

1.7 2.4

-0.2 -3.8 1.7 2.0

-0.2 -3.8 1.6 1.6

16.8 6.6 10.5 11.6

16.8 6.6 10.4 10.8

16.8 6.6 10.3 10.0

4.1 6.0 4.0 2.7

3.9 5.7 3.6 2.1

3.6 5.4 3.1 1.6

3.4 4.2 2.6 1.5

3.2 3.9 2.2 1.1

3.1 3.7 1.9 0.7

15.5 18.6 12.7 8.5

15.2 18.1 11.9 7.5

14.8 17.6 11.2 6.7

-0.2 1.2 -1.6 0.6 1.2

-0.2 1.0 -1.6 0.5 1.0

-0.3 0.8 -1.6 0.4 0.8

-1.1 0.1

-1.1 -0.1

-2.3

-2.3

-0.4 0.2

-0.5 0.0

-1.1 -0.2 -2.3 -0.6 -0.2

8.6 9.8 6.1 9.8 9.6

8.6 9.5 6.1 9.7 9.2

8.5 9.1 6.1 9.5 8.8

2.7 -2.0 1.6 3.9

-2.0

2.0 to 6.0

-3.8

0.5 to 4.5

24.8 12.1

Chart 4

ACTUAL AND TARGETED M2 Billions of Dollars

3800 -

Actual Level SShort-Run Alternatives

3750 Monthly

3700

3650

3600

7 3550 * * *

...

A B C

)r

. - *

3500

3450

3400

O

N

D

J

F

MA

M

J J 1993

A

S

N

D

J 1994

3350

Chart 5

ACTUAL AND TARGETED M3 Billions of Dollars

4450 -

Actual Level *

Short-Run Alternatives

4400 4.5%

Monthly

4350

4300

4250

4200 ** S

.**• B *

B

B .. * C.

4150

4100

4050

ON

D

J

F

MA

M

J J 199;3

A

SO

N

D

J 1994

4000

Chart 6

M1 Billions of Dollars

1250 -

Actual Level SShort-Run Alternatives

Monthly

1200 15%

1150

1100

B

S*

." .. .

-'" ,oO----""

°

* o°°"

°° °•

°°°"

1050

....

0% %...........................................................

1000

ON

D

J

F

M

A

M

J JASO 1993

N

D

J 1994

950

Chart 7

DEBT Billions of Dollars

13000 -

Actual Level Projected Level

*

-

12800

Monthly

12600

12400 4.5%

12200

-112000

-- 11800

--111600

-1 11400

I

I O

I N

I D

I J

I F

I M

I A

I M

I J

J

1993

I

I A

S

I

O

I

N

I

D

I

J

1994

111200

-11-

(13)

Under alternative B, M2 is projected to increase at about

a 5-3/4 percent average rate over May and June, a considerable pickup from recent months. 6

Some of the strength in May, and to a lesser

extent in June, reflects reversals of previous temporary depressants involving tax effects, the late-winter lull in mortgage refinancing activity, and seasonal-adjustment distortions.7

Apart from effects

of these temporary factors, underlying M2 probably will exhibit a speedup over the two months, owing to an abatement of the more fundamental influences that had boosted its velocity to a 5-3/4 percent growth rate over the previous two quarters.

Quarterly average growth of M2 for the

second quarter is projected at about a 1-1/2 percent rate, with temporary factors having little net impact.

Thus, with nominal GDP

expected to rise at about a 4-1/4 percent rate, M2 velocity would increase at only about a 2-1/2 percent pace.

If the money market condi-

tions of this alternative were maintained over the summer, M2 growth would be expected to move up still nearer to that of nominal GDP in the third quarter. (14)

M3 under alternative B is seen as accelerating to about a

4 percent rate over May and June.

This speedup would stem solely from

the pickup in M2, as managed liabilities in M3, including large time deposits, should resume running off over the two months.

Bank credit

expansion is expected to remain moderate, with loan growth quite weak,

6. M1 is projected to rise at an 18 percent annual rate from April

to June.

The expansion in M1 deposits should show through in rapid

growth in required reserves, and total reserves would be expected to expand at a 19-1/4 percent annual rate from April to June. With currency growth anticipated at 11 percent over the two months, the monetary base would rise at an 11-1/4 percent pace. 7. This year's seasonal adjustment factors for February and March appear to be elevated artificially by the influence of System easing actions around year-end 1990 and 1991 rather than evolving seasonal patterns.

-12-

and the balance sheets of thrift institutions are anticipated to continue to contract.

While inflows of core deposits are projected to meet

most of the added funding needs of banks and S&Ls, banks are likely to obtain some funding from abroad and from other nondeposit sources, in part to avoid higher deposit insurance premiums.

Looking further ahead,

moderate average growth of M3 during the third quarter would be expected to accompany retention of the specifications of alternative B over that period. (15)

Households and businesses are expected to stay cautious

in using credit in coming months.

In the household sector, mortgage

refinancing activity is likely to remain brisk.

Overall mortgage debt,

however, is expected to expand at about its first-quarter pace, as cashout refinancing activity continues to be limited and home purchases rise only gradually.

Growth of consumer credit is projected to remain

moderate, despite heavy promotion of credit cards with rebates and other incentives.

Given still-favorable conditions in longer-term markets

under alternative B, issuance of corporate bonds and stocks should remain relatively heavy.

With the shortfall of internal funds relative

to capital expenditures remaining small, businesses are likely to continue to use the proceeds of securities issuance to pay down higher-cost bonds and bank loans.

Treasury borrowing should pick up in coming

months to finance a widening deficit, with more issuance in the shorter end of the market, reflecting the recent shift in debt management policy.

Domestic nonfinancial debt would be expected to move further

above the lower edge of its 4-1/2 to 8-1/2 percent monitoring range through June. (16)

The lower interest rates of alternative A would be ex-

pected to provide some added lift to growth of the monetary aggregates.

-13Banks and thrifts, while continuing to price their deposits unaggressively, likely would not immediately match the downward movement in market rates.

Yields on money market mutual funds, likewise, would lag

the decline in market rates.

The lower opportunity costs of deposits

and money funds relative to short-term market rates should provide a small boost to the aggregates, even though attractive yields would continue to induce heavy inflows into bond and stock mutual funds.

M2

growth over May and June would come in at about a 6 percent rate, with much of the additional strength resulting from its M1 component. would expand at a 4-1/4 percent rate.

M3

Despite the more rapid growth,

both of the broad monetary aggregates would remain well below their annual ranges in June.

M2 growth is projected to post a 2-3/4 percent

pace from June to September, bringing the rate of expansion for the April to September period to 4 percent.

Even with the lower interest

rates and consequent economic stimulus of this alternative later in the year, M2 would be unlikely to reach the lower end of its annual range by the fourth quarter. (17)

Under alternative C, the higher money market interest

rates and opportunity costs would restrain the monetary aggregates.

The

restraint on the aggregates could be limited to the degree that capital losses on bond and stock funds prompt investors to shift back into deposits, but on balance the tighter monetary stance should act to slow monetary growth.

M2 would expand at only a 5-1/2 percent rate over May

and June, and M3 at a 3-3/4 percent pace.

The moderate upward trajec-

tory of M2 expected under unchanged interest rates later in the year would be trimmed, with growth from June to September likely at only a 1-1/2 percent rate; and M2 would finish the year well below its target range.

Maintenance of the money market conditions of alternative C

probably would induce M3 to contract on the year.

-14-

Directive language (19)

Presented below is draft wording for the operational

paragraph that includes the usual options and updating.

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. In the context of the Committee's long-run objectives for price stability and sustainable economic growth, and giving careful consideration to economic, financial, and monetary developments, slightly (SOMEWHAT) greater reserve restraint (WOULD/MIGHT) or slightly (SOMEWHAT) lesser reserve restraint would (MIGHT) be acceptable in the intermeeting period.

The

contemplated reserve conditions are expected to be consistent with APPRECIABLE [DEL:a resumption of moderate] growth in the broader monetary aggregates over the second quarter.

May 17, 1993 SELECTED INTEREST RATES (percent) Short-Term federal funds

Treasury bills secondary market 3-month

1 _

6-month I 1-year

Long-Term CDs secondary market

comm. paper

money market mutual

bank prime

U.S. government constant maturity yields

3-month

1-month

fund

loan

3-year

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

I

corporate conventional home mortgages A-utility municipal secondary primary recently Bond market market

10-year

30-year

offered

Buyer

10

11

12

13

fixed-rate lixed-rate

14

15

16

ARM

92 -- High -- Low

4.20 2.86

4.05 2.69

4.22 2.82

4.51 2.91

4.32 3.07

5.02 3.17

4.51 2.74

6.50 6.00

6.32 4.24

7.65 6.30

8.07 7.29

8.99 8.06

6,87 6.12

9.22 7.86

9.03 7.84

6.22 4.97

93 -- High -- Low

3.24 2.87

3.09 2,82

3.26 2.94

3.43 3.07

3.28 3.06

3.39 3.07

2.92 2.59

6.00 6.00

5.06 4.24

6.73 5.87

7.46 6.74

8.28 7.47

6.44 5.69

8.30 7.43

8.14 7.38

5.36 4.63

92 92 92 92 92 92 92 92

3.82 3.76 3.25 3.30 3.22 3.10 3.09 2.92

3.63 3.66 3.21 3.13 2.91 2.86 3.13 3.22

3.75 3.77 3.28 3.21 2.96 3.04 3.34 3.36

3.99 3.98 3.45 3.33 3.06 3.17 3.52 3.55

3.82 3.86 3.37 3.31 3.13 3.26 3.58 3.48

3.87 3.91 3.43 3.38 3.25 3.22 3.25 3.71

3.52 3.45 3.25 3.07 2.91 2.79 2.83 2.82

6.50 6.50 6.02 6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00

5.81 5.60 4.91 4.72 4.42 4.64 5.14 5.21

7.39 7.26 6.84 6.59 6.42 6.59 6.87 6.77

7.89 7.84 7.60 7.39 7.34 7.53 7.61 7.44

8.70 8.62 8.38 8.16 8.11 8.40 8.51 8.27

6.73 6.66 6.32 6.31 6.40 6.59 6.56 6.43

8.85 8.66 8.25 8.04 7.98 8.25 8.48 8.34

8.67 8.51 8.13 7.98 7.92 8.09 8.31 8.22

6.00 5.87 5.51 5.27 5.11 5.06 5.26 5.45

93 93 93 93

3.02 3.03 3.07 2.96

3.00 2.93 2.95 2.87

3.14 3.07 3.05 2.97

3.35 3.25 3.20 3.11

3.19 3.12 3.11 3.09

3.21 3.14 3.15 3.13

2.83 2.72 2.66 2.65

6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00

4.93 4.58 4.40 4.30

6.60 6.26 5.98 5.97

7.34 7.09 6.82 6.85

8.13 7.80 7.61 7.66

6.40 6.12 5.85 5.99

8.16 7.78 7.70 7.59

8.02 7.68 7.50 7.47

5.23 4.98 4.79 4.71

27 93

2.94

2.95

3.08

3.28

3.15

3.15

2.77

6.00

4.84

6.53

7.27

7.95

6.36

8.01

7.86

5.06

Feb Feb Feb Feb

3 10 17 24

93 93 93 93

3.15 2.92 3.06 2.91

2.92 2.92 2.92 2.93

3.09 3.09 3.08 3.03

3.25 3.30 3.29 3.17

3.14 3.13 3.12 3.09

3.15 3.15 3.17 3.12

2.74 2.73 2.71 2.69

6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00

4.73 4.68 4.65 4.41

6.42 6.38 6.34 6.07

7.23 7.20 7.13 6.94

7.88 7,85 7.73 7.63

6.29 6.22 6.06 5.89

7.88 7.88 7.71 7.66

7.80 7.75 7.65 7.53

5.06 5.04 4.95 4.85

Mar Mar Mar Mar Mar

3 10 17 24 31

93 93 93 93 93

3.24 3.02 3.04 2.93 3.18

2.95 2.98 2.98 2.94 2.92

3.04 3.08 3.09 3.04 3.02

3.17 3.23 3.25 3.17 3.17

3.11 3.12 3.12 3.10 3.12

3.12 3.14 3.17 3.14 3.18

2.71 2.67 2,66 2.65 2.66

6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00

4.32 4.38 4.52 4.36 4.42

5.97 5.89 6.06 5.94 6.04

6.85 6.74 6.85 6.80 6.90

7.47 7.62 7.58 7.73 7.86

5.69 5.83 5.90 5.99 6.07

7.69 7.68 7.61 7.80 7.74

7.44 7.47 7.57 7.50 7.53

4.79 4.78 4,82 4.75 4.75

Apr Apr Apr Apr

7 14 21 28

93 93 93 93

3.11 2.93 2.91 2.87

2.91 2.87 2.82 2.88

3.00 2.99 2.94 2.96

3.17 3.10 3.07 3.09

3.12 3.09 3.09 3.07

3.16 3.15 3.12 3.10

2.67 2.64 2.63 2.61

6.00 6.00 6.00 6.00

4.42 4.27 4.24 4.27

6.10 5.93 5.87 5.95

7.00 6.80 6.75 6.84

7.64 7.55 7.59 7.76

6.06 5.91 5.95 5.98

7.63 7.57 7.43 7.56

7.57 7.45 7.38 7.43

4.81 4.70 4.64 4.67

May May Daily May May

5 93 12 93

2.98 2.90

2.89 2.88

2.97 2.98

3.12 3.11

3.07 3.06

3.09 3.07

2.62 2.59

6.00 6.00

4.26 4.25

5.97 5.91

6.86 6.83

7.67 7.74

5.88 5.90

7.51 7.65

7.42 7.42

4.66 4.63

7 93 13 93

May

14 93

2.83 2.97 2.94p

2.87 2.93 2.96

2.97 3.02 3.06

3.11 3.17 3.20

3.05 3.07 3.12

3.07 3.10 3.11

----

6.00 6.00 6.00

4.25 4.35 4.38

5.92 6.02 6.03

6.85 6.96 6.95

Monthly May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr Weekly Jan

--

-

NOTE: Weekly 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 isthe FNMA purchase yield, plus loan servicing fee, on 30-day mandatory delivery commitments. Column 15 is the average contract rate on new commitments for fixed-rate mortgages (FRMs) with 80 percent loan-to-value ratios at major institutional lenders. Column 16 isthe average initial contract rate on new commitments for 1-year, adjustablerate mortgages (ARMs) at major institutional lenders offering both FRMs and ARMs with the same number of discount points. p - preliminary data

Strictly Confidential (FR)-

class rFOMC

Money and Credit Aggregate Measures Seasonally adjusted

MAY.

Money stock measures and liquid assets Period

M1

M2

I

Bank credit M3

total loaln and

L

_

Domestic nonfinancial debt'

U.S. government'

other'

total'

Investments'

in M3 only 4

2

in M2 3

4.3 8.0 14.3

4.0 2.8 1.8

3.9 1.1 -2.6

-6.5 -6.2 -6.6

1.8 1.1 0.3

2.0 0.3 1.4

5.6 3.5 3.7

10.3 11.0 10.7

5.9 2.2 3.0

6.9 4.3 4.9

QUARTERLY AVERAGE 1992-2nd QTR. 1992-3rd QTR. 1992-4th QTR. 1993-1st QTR.

10.6 11.6 16.8 6.6

0.3 0.8 2.7 -2.0

-3.4 -3.2 -2.8 -5.5

-4.9 -3.5 -14.4 -13.4

-0.6 0.1 -0.2 -3.8

1.3 1.1 2.0 -1.9

3.3 3.5 4.1 1.0

14.4 10.7 6.0 8.7

2.8 2.9 3.8 3.2

5.7 4.9 4.4 4.6

MONTHLY 1992-APR. MAY JUNE JULY AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV. DEC.

7.8 14.0 0.5 13.5 15.2 18.0 19.1 15.7 8.8

-1.0 0.9 -1.9 0.5 3,0 2.7 3.9 2.3 -0.3

-4.3 -4.0 -2.8 -4.4 -1.6 -3.2 -2.3 -3.2 -4.1

-6.7 -1.3 -7.2 -4.4 1.5 -6.1 -24.4 -13.9 -19.2

-2.0 0.5 -2.8 -0.3 2.8 1.2 -0.9 -0.4 -3.4

-0.2 0.5 0.9 -0.6 3.2 2.7 1.2 3.2 -0.9

5.2 0.5 3.1 1.7 6.5 6.3 3.3

15.0 13.0 14.6 9.9 9.5 5.0 -1.1 10.5 16.3

2.7 2.4 2.4 2.8 3.3 3.9 4.2 4.0 2.7

5.8 5.0 5.5 4.6 4.9 4.2 2.8 5.7 6.2

7.8 -0.2 2.7 9.0

-3.4 -4.0 -1.0 0.1

-8.1 -5.6 -2.5 -3.7

-28.0 9.9 -5.1 11.5

-7.3 -1.8 -1.7 1.9

-5.1 -1.5 0.2

-2.0 1.5 5.4 5.0

2.9 5.3 15.0

2.7 3.9 3.7

2.7 4.3 6.6

1026.6

3497.0

2470.3

669.5

4166.4

5052.0

2938.8

3068.8

8699.4

11768.2

1033.3 1033.1 1035.4 1043.2

3487.0 3475.3 3472.4 3472.8

2453.7 2442.2 2437.1 2429.6

653.9 659.3 656.5 662.8

4140.9 4134.6 4128.9 4135.6

5030.4 5024.0 5025.0

2933.8 2937.5 2950.6 2962.8

3076.3 3090.0 3128.5

8718.8 8747.1 8774.2

11795.1 11837.1 11902.6

5 12 19 26 p

1042.1 1044.2 1039.1 1040.7

3476.0 3476.1 3466.2 3468.8

2433.9 2431.9 2427.2 2428.0

652.8 660.8 661.7 670.4

4128.7 4137.0 4127.9 4139.2

3 p

1055.1

3482.4

2427.3

667.4

4149.8

. 1

ANN. GROWTH RATES I() ANNUALLY (Q4 TO Q4) 1990 1991 1992

1993-JAN. FEB. MAR, APR. p LEVELS ($BILLIONS) : MONTHLY 1992-DEC. 1993-JAN. FEB. MAR. APR. p

HEEKLY 1993-APR.

MAY

1. 2.

nontransactions components

17, 1993

_5

__

_

9

_10

Adjusted for breaks caused by reclassifications. Debt data are on a monthly average basis, derived by averaging end-of-month levels of adjacent months, and have been adjusted to remove discontinuities. p-preliminary pe-preliminary estimate

Strictly Conidential (FR). cla. l FOMC

Components of Money Stock and Related Measures seasonally adjusted unless otherwise noted

Overnight RPs and Eurodollars NSA'

Savings ' deposits

4

5

Currency

Demand deposits

Other checkable deposits

1

2

3

245.4 265.8 290.0

277.7 287.0 338.8

293.1 329.6 380.2

78.8 73.4 74.7

919.8 1028.8 1179.0

MONTHLY 1992-APR. MAY JUNE

273.6 275.1 276.6

310.8 314.7 312.3

349.0 354.7 355.9

72.8 69.5 72.5

JULY AUG. SEP.

279.5 282.4 286.3

317.5 322.5 329.0

358.6 362.8 366.7

OCT. NOV. DEC.

288.0 289.8 292.3

336.0 339.5 340.9

1993-JAN. FEB. MAR.

294.7 296.8 299.0 301.4

Period

Small denomination time deposlts'

MAY.

Money market mutual lunds general Institupurpose tions and broker/ only e

17,

1993

Large denomination lime deposits'

Term RPs NSA'

Term Eurodollars NSA'

Savings bonds

Shortterm Treasury securities

Commercial paper'

Bankers accaplances

10

11

12

13

14

15

deal r*

LEVELS ($BILLIONSI : ANNUALLY (4TH QTR.) 1990 1991 1992

APR. p

1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

7

8

9

1171.6 1081.0 882.8

348.2 362.9 344.1

131.5 175.6 207.5

496.8 432.3 361.9

93.6 74.7 80.5

68.0 60.7 47.0

125.2 137.0 154.5

329.9 319.4 330.6

356.2 336.3 369.6

36.3 24.4 20.4

1107.5 1119.6 1126.0

986.1 969.6 955.7

354.5 354.9 353.5

195.9 202.2 206.3

402.1 395.9 389.3

74.1 76.4 76.4

54.9 52.8 51.9

142.4 143.5 144.6

325.9 329.4 330.1

341.0 336.4 348.1

21.8 22.0 22.0

72.8 76.2 73.8

1134.5 1145.7 1158.9

941.5 926.9 912.7

350.4 348.9 343.9

212.5 220.9 220.7

382.5 378.1 373.7

75.1 75.7 77.5

51.1 51.4 49.4

145.8 147.4 149.3

324.8 322.9 321.0

351.2 355.7 363.4

21.7 21.1 20.7

373.7 381.6 385.2

75.0 75.1 73.9

1170.5 1180.4 1186.0

896.5 881.7 870.2

346.3 343.7 342.3

210.9 209.2 202.3

367.0 361.3 357.5

79.5 81.3 80.6

48.1 47.2 45.6

151.9 154.7 156.8

321.8 330.1 340.0

368.0 372.4 368.4

20.5 20.3 20.4

341.9 341.9 342.0

388.6 386.4 386.4

72.3 72.9 72.9

1184.3 1182.3 1178.8

860.9 855.0 850.1

339.6 333.6 333.1

197.7 201.9 200.9

350.7 346.3 340.4

79.8 82.3 86.1

43.5 46.2 48.5

158.9 161.1 162.7

347.1 350.5 349.6

363.0 357.8 364.7

20.6 20.1 19.1

347.3

386.4

69.5

1181.4

843.6

331.7

200.4

343.1

88.8

48.3

6

Net of money market mutual fund holdings of these items. Includes money market deposit accounts. Includes retail repurchase agreements. All IRA and Keogh accounts at commercial banks and thrift institutions are subtracted from small Excludes IRA and Keogh accounts. Net of large denomination time deposits held by money market mutual funds and thrift institutions. p-preliminary

time deposits.

NET CHANGES IN SYSTEM HOLDINGS OF SECURITES Millions of dollars, not seasonally adjusted

May 14, 1993

Treasury bills Period

Net purchases

Redemptions purchases (-)n

2

Net

rNtpu

change

1 year

Treasurycoupons Netpurchases 3 s 5-10 over 10 1-5 10

1990 1991 1992

17,448 20,038 13,086

4,400 1,000 1,600

13,048 19,038 11,486

425 3,043 1,096

50 6,583 13,118

1992 --Q1 ---Q2 --Q3 ---Q4

-1,000 4,415 867 8,805

1,600

-2,600 4,415 867 8,805

285 350 461

Redemptions

Net Change

--375 2,333

Federal agencies redemptions

Net change outright holdings total 4 total4

--- 13,240 27,726 30,219

11,128 -1,614 -13,215

2,452 2,193 3,900 4,572

--- 2,452 3,730 5,927 7,256

-233 7,896 6,617 15,939

-14,636 1,137 14,195 -13,912

279

1,441

--- 3,141

2,851

-461

.--.

200 1,993

-----

200 3,530

400 3,500 200 4,172 200

-----------

595 5,332 200 6,756 300

4,149 3,796 -85 812 5,890 4,272 7,820 3,848

-1,203 1,996 -914 5,371 9,739 -19,267 2,425 2,929

3,141 4,990 -..

-103 -85 3,039 5,083

-6,128 4,788 879 -5,514

._°

-65 -38

---.

-50

10,941 -10,279 6,232 -9,727 6,075 -228 3,576 -5,137 -1,152 -766 6,344 -52 5,327 -6,724 -3,968 -78 7,936

-.-.

4,110 306

4,110 306

271 595 4,072 1,064 3,669

271 595 4,072 1,064 3,669

285

350 461

-----

1993 January

February March April Weekly January 20

Net RPs

375 11,282 19,365

1993 ---Q1 1992 May June July August September October November December

-100 1,280 2,818

STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL (FR) CLASS II-FOMC

1

279 244

1,441 2,490

716 1,147

705 1,110

27

February 3 10

17 24 March 3 10 17 24 31 April 7 14 21 28 May 5 12 Memo: LEVEL (bil. $)6 May 12

°_.

-35 -60

... --. ._°

-21

279

1,441

3,141

244

2,490

4,990 °..

3,141 -41 -28 5,111 --.

150.3

181.4

1. Change from end-of-period to end-of-period. 2. Outright transactions in market and with foreign accounts. 3. Outright transactions in market and with foreign accounts, and short-term notes acquired in exchange for maturing bills. Excludes maturity shifts and rollovers of maturing issues.

72.9

21.5

29.9

316.8

-6.1

4. Reflects net change in redemptions (-) of Tre;asury and agency securities. 5. Includes change in RPs (+), matched sale-pu rchase transactions (-), and matched purchase sale transactions (+). 6. The levels of agency issues were as follows: within 1 year May 12

2.0

1-5 2.3

5-10 0.7

over 10 0.1

total 5.1

Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (1993, May 17). Bluebook. Bluebooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/bluebook_19930518
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_bluebook_19930518,
  author = {Federal Reserve},
  title = {Bluebook},
  year = {1993},
  month = {May},
  howpublished = {Bluebooks, Federal Reserve},
  url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/bluebook_19930518},
  note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}