fomc minutes · January 29, 2002

FOMC Minutes

A meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee was held in the offices of the Board of

Governors of the Federal Reserve System in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, January 29,

2002, at 2:30 p.m. and continued on Wednesday, January 30, 2002, at 9:00 a.m.

Present:

Mr. Greenspan, Chairman

Mr. McDonough, Vice Chairman

Ms. Bies

Mr. Ferguson

Mr. Gramlich

Mr. Jordan

Mr. McTeer

Mr. Olson

Mr. Santomero

Mr. Stern

Messrs. Broaddus, Guynn, Moskow, and Parry, Alternate Members of the Federal

Open Market Committee

Mr. Hoenig, Ms. Minehan, and Mr. Poole, Presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks of

Kansas City, Boston, and St. Louis respectively

Mr. Kohn, Secretary and Economist

Mr. Bernard, Deputy Secretary

Mr. Gillum, Assistant Secretary

Ms. Smith, Assistant Secretary

Mr. Mattingly, General Counsel

Mr. Baxter1, Deputy General Counsel

Ms. Johnson, Economist

Mr. Reinhart, Economist

Mr. Stockton, Economist

Mr. Connors, Ms. Cumming, Messrs. Howard, Lindsey, Ms. Mester, Messrs. Oliner,

Rolnick, Rosenblum, Sniderman, and Wilcox, Associate Economists

Mr. Kos, Manager, System Open Market Account

Mr. Winn, Assistant to the Board, Office of Board Members, Board of Governors

Mr. Skidmore, Special Assistant to the Board, Office of Board Members, Board of

Governors

Messrs. Ettin and Madigan, Deputy Directors, Divisions of Research and Statistics

and Monetary Affairs respectively, Board of Governors

Mr. Simpson, Senior Adviser, Division of Research and Statistics, Board of

Governors

Messrs. Slifman and Struckmeyer, Associate Directors, Division of Research and

Statistics, Board of Governors

Messrs. Kamin2 and Whitesell, Deputy Associate Directors, Divisions of

International Finance and Monetary Affairs respectively, Board of Governors

Messrs. Gagnon2 and Reifschneider,2 Assistant Directors, Divisions of International

Finance and Research and Statistics respectively, Board of Governors

Mr. Small,2 Section Chief, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors

Mr. Morton,3 Senior Economist, Division of International Finance, Board of

Governors

Messrs. Lebow3 and Williams,2 Senior Economists, Division of Research and

Statistics, Board of Governors

Messrs. Ahearn2 and Wright,2 Economists, Division of International Finance, Board

of Governors

Mr. Zakrajsek,3 Economist, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors

Ms. Low, Open Market Secretariat Assistant, Office of Board Members, Board of

Governors

Mr. Lyon, First Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

Messrs. Beebe, Eisenbeis, Fuhrer, Goodfriend, Hakkio, Hunter, Ms. Krieger, and Mr.

Rasche, Senior Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of San Francisco, Atlanta,

Boston, Richmond, Kansas City, Chicago, New York, and St. Louis respectively

In the agenda for this meeting, it was reported that advices of the election of the following members

and alternate members of the Federal Open Market Committee for the period commencing January

1, 2002, and ending December 31, 2002, had been received and that these individuals had executed

their oaths of office.

The elected members and alternate members were as follows:

William J. McDonough, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, with Jamie B.

Stewart, Jr., First Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, as alternate.

Anthony M. Santomero, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, with J. Alfred

Broaddus, Jr., President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, as alternate.

Jerry L. Jordan, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, with Michael H. Moskow,

President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, as alternate.

Robert D. McTeer, Jr., President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, with Jack Guynn, President

of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, as alternate.

Gary H. Stern, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, with Robert T. Parry,

President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, as alternate.

By unanimous vote, the following officers of the Federal Open Market Committee were elected to

serve until the election of their successors at the first regularly scheduled meeting of the Committee

after December 31, 2002, with the understanding that in the event of the discontinuance of their

official connection with the Board of Governors or with a Federal Reserve Bank, they would cease

to have any official connection with the Federal Open Market Committee:

Alan Greenspan

Chairman

William J. McDonough

Vice Chairman

Donald L. Kohn

Secretary and Economist

Normand R. V. Bernard

Deputy Secretary

Gary P. Gillum

Assistant Secretary

Michelle A. Smith

Assistant Secretary

J. Virgil Mattingly, Jr.

General Counsel

Thomas C. Baxter, Jr.

Deputy General Counsel

Karen H. Johnson

Economist

Vincent R. Reinhart

Economist

David J. Stockton

Economist

Thomas A. Connors, Christine Cumming,

David H. Howard, David E. Lindsey,

Loretta J. Mester, Stephen D. Oliner,

Arthur J. Rolnick, Harvey Rosenblum,

Mark S. Sniderman, and David W. Wilcox Associate Economists

By unanimous vote, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York was selected to execute transactions

for the System Open Market Account until the adjournment of the first regularly scheduled meeting

of the Committee after December 31, 2002.

By unanimous vote, Dino Kos was selected to serve at the pleasure of the Committee as Manager,

System Open Market Account, on the understanding that his selection was subject to being

satisfactory to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Secretary's note: Advice subsequently was received that the selection of Mr. Kos as

Manager was satisfactory to the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of New

York.

By unanimous vote, the Authorization for Domestic Open Market Operations was reaffirmed in the

form shown below.

AUTHORIZATION FOR DOMESTIC OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS

(Reaffirmed January 29, 2002)

1. The Federal Open Market Committee authorizes and directs the Federal Reserve Bank of

New York, to the extent necessary to carry out the most recent domestic policy directive

adopted at a meeting of the Committee:

(a) To buy or sell U.S. Government securities, including securities of the Federal

Financing Bank, and securities that are direct obligations of, or fully guaranteed as to

principal and interest by, any agency of the United States in the open market, from or

to securities dealers and foreign and international accounts maintained at the Federal

Reserve Bank of New York, on a cash, regular, or deferred delivery basis, for the

System Open Market Account at market prices, and, for such Account, to exchange

maturing U.S. Government and Federal agency securities with the Treasury or the

individual agencies or to allow them to mature without replacement; provided that the

aggregate amount of U.S. Government and Federal agency securities held in such

Account (including forward commitments) at the close of business on the day of a

meeting of the Committee at which action is taken with respect to a domestic policy

directive shall not be increased or decreased by more than $12.0 billion during the

period commencing with the opening of business on the day following such meeting

and ending with the close of business on the day of the next such meeting.

(b) To buy U.S. Government securities and obligations that are direct obligations of, or

fully guaranteed as to principal and interest by, any agency of the United States, from

dealers for the account of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York under agreements for

repurchase of such securities or obligations in 65 business days or less, at rates that,

unless otherwise expressly authorized by the Committee, shall be determined by

competitive bidding, after applying reasonable limitations on the volume of

agreements with individual dealers; provided that in the event Government securities

or agency issues covered by any such agreement are not repurchased by the dealer

pursuant to the agreement or a renewal thereof, they shall be sold in the market or

transferred to the System Open Market Account.

(c) To sell U.S. Government securities and obligations that are direct obligations of, or

fully guaranteed as to principal and interest by, any agency of the United States to

dealers for System Open Market Account under agreements for the resale by dealers of

such securities or obligations in 65 business days or less, at rates that, unless otherwise

expressly authorized by the Committee, shall be determined by competitive bidding,

after applying reasonable limitations on the volume of agreements with individual

dealers.

2. In order to ensure the effective conduct of open market operations, the Federal Open Market

Committee authorizes the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to lend on an overnight basis

U.S. Government securities held in the System Open Market Account to dealers at rates that

shall be determined by competitive bidding but that in no event shall be less than 1.0 percent

per annum of the market value of the securities lent. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York

shall apply reasonable limitations on the total amount of a specific issue that may be

auctioned, and on the amount of securities that each dealer may borrow. The Federal Reserve

Bank of New York may reject bids which could facilitate a dealer's ability to control a single

issue as determined solely by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

3. In order to ensure the effective conduct of open market operations, while assisting in the

provision of short-term investments for foreign and international accounts maintained at the

Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Federal Open Market Committee authorizes and

directs the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (a) for System Open Market Account, to sell

U.S. Government securities to such foreign and international accounts on the bases set forth

in paragraph l (a) under agreements providing for the resale by such accounts of those

securities in 65 business days or less on terms comparable to those available on such

transactions in the market; and (b) for New York Bank account, when appropriate, to

undertake with dealers, subject to the conditions imposed on purchases and sales of securities

in paragraph l (b), repurchase agreements in U.S. Government and agency securities, and to

arrange corresponding sale and repurchase agreements between its own account and foreign

and international accounts maintained at the Bank. Transactions undertaken with such

accounts under the provisions of this paragraph may provide for a service fee when

appropriate.

4. In the execution of the Committee's decision regarding policy during any intermeeting

period, the Committee authorizes and directs the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, upon

the instruction of the Chairman of the Committee, to adjust somewhat in exceptional

circumstances the degree of pressure on reserve positions and hence the intended federal

funds rate. Any such adjustment shall be made in the context of the Committee's discussion

and decision at its most recent meeting and the Committee's long-run objectives for price

stability and sustainable economic growth, and shall be based on economic, financial, and

monetary developments during the intermeeting period. Consistent with Committee practice,

the Chairman, if feasible, will consult with the Committee before making any adjustment.

By unanimous vote, the Committee approved until the Committee's first regularly scheduled

meeting in 2003 a further extension of the temporary suspension of paragraphs 3 to 6 of the

Guidelines for the Conduct of System Open Market Operations in Federal Agency Issues. For the

year ahead, the Guidelines therefore continued to read as shown below:

GUIDELINES FOR THE CONDUCT OF SYSTEM OPEN

MARKET OPERATIONS IN FEDERAL AGENCY ISSUES

(Reaffirmed January 29, 2002)

1. System open market operations in Federal agency issues are an integral part of total System

open market operations designed to influence bank reserves, money market conditions, and

monetary aggregates.

2. System open market operations in Federal agency issues are not designed to support

individual sectors of the market or to channel funds into issues of particular agencies.

By unanimous vote, the Authorization for Foreign Currency Operations was reaffirmed in the form

shown below.

AUTHORIZATION FOR FOREIGN CURRENCY OPERATIONS

(Reaffirmed January 29, 2002)

1. The Federal Open Market Committee authorizes and directs the Federal Reserve Bank of

New York, for System Open Market Account, to the extent necessary to carry out the

Committee's foreign currency directive and express authorizations by the Committee

pursuant thereto, and in conformity with such procedural instructions as the Committee may

issue from time to time:

A. To purchase and sell the following foreign currencies in the form of cable transfers

through spot or forward transactions on the open market at home and abroad, including

transactions with the U.S. Treasury, with the U.S. Exchange Stabilization Fund

established by Section 10 of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, with foreign monetary

authorities, with the Bank for International Settlements, and with other international

financial institutions:

Canadian dollars

Danish kroner

Euro

Pounds sterling

Japanese yen

Mexican pesos

Norwegian kroner

Swedish kronor

Swiss francs

B. To hold balances of, and to have outstanding forward contracts to receive or to

deliver, the foreign currencies listed in paragraph A above.

C. To draw foreign currencies and to permit foreign banks to draw dollars under the

reciprocal currency arrangements listed in paragraph 2 below, provided that drawings

by either party to any such arrangement shall be fully liquidated within 12 months after

any amount outstanding at that time was first drawn, unless the Committee, because of

exceptional circumstances, specifically authorizes a delay.

D. To maintain an overall open position in all foreign currencies not exceeding $25.0

billion. For this purpose, the overall open position in all foreign currencies is defined

as the sum (disregarding signs) of net positions in individual currencies. The net

position in a single foreign currency is defined as holdings of balances in that currency,

plus outstanding contracts for future receipt, minus outstanding contracts for future

delivery of that currency, i.e., as the sum of these elements with due regard to sign.

2. The Federal Open Market Committee directs the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to

maintain reciprocal currency arrangements ("swap" arrangements) for the System Open

Market Account for periods up to a maximum of 12 months with the following foreign

banks, which are among those designated by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve

System under Section 214.5 of Regulation N, Relations with Foreign Banks and Bankers, and

with the approval of the Committee to renew such arrangements on maturity:

Foreign bank

Bank of Canada

Bank of Mexico

Amount of arrangement

(millions of dollars equivalent)

2,000

3,000

Any changes in the terms of existing swap arrangements, and the proposed terms of any new

arrangements that may be authorized, shall be referred for review and approval to the

Committee.

3. All transactions in foreign currencies undertaken under paragraph 1.A. above shall, unless

otherwise expressly authorized by the Committee, be at prevailing market rates. For the

purpose of providing an investment return on System holdings of foreign currencies, or for

the purpose of adjusting interest rates paid or received in connection with swap drawings,

transactions with foreign central banks may be undertaken at non-market exchange rates.

4. It shall be the normal practice to arrange with foreign central banks for the coordination of

foreign currency transactions. In making operating arrangements with foreign central banks

on System holdings of foreign currencies, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York shall not

commit itself to maintain any specific balance unless authorized by the Federal Open Market

Committee. Any agreements or understandings concerning the administration of the accounts

maintained by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York with the foreign banks designated by

the Board of Governors under Section 214.5 of Regulation N shall be referred for review and

approval to the Committee.

5. Foreign currency holdings shall be invested to ensure that adequate liquidity is maintained to

meet anticipated needs and so that each currency portfolio shall generally have an average

duration of no more than 18 months (calculated as Macaulay duration). When appropriate in

connection with arrangements to provide investment facilities for foreign currency holdings,

U.S. Government securities may be purchased from foreign central banks under agreements

for repurchase of such securities within 30 calendar days.

6. All operations undertaken pursuant to the preceding paragraphs shall be reported promptly to

the Foreign Currency Subcommittee and the Committee. The Foreign Currency

Subcommittee consists of the Chairman and Vice Chairman of the Committee, the Vice

Chairman of the Board of Governors, and such other member of the Board as the Chairman

may designate (or in the absence of members of the Board serving on the Subcommittee,

other Board members designated by the Chairman as alternates, and in the absence of the

Vice Chairman of the Committee, his alternate). Meetings of the Subcommittee shall be

called at the request of any member, or at the request of the Manager, System Open Market

Account ("Manager"), for the purposes of reviewing recent or contemplated operations and

of consulting with the Manager on other matters relating to his responsibilities. At the request

of any member of the Subcommittee, questions arising from such reviews and consultations

shall be referred for determination to the Federal Open Market Committee.

7. The Chairman is authorized:

A. With the approval of the Committee, to enter into any needed agreement or

understanding with the Secretary of the Treasury about the division of responsibility

for foreign currency operations between the System and the Treasury;

B. To keep the Secretary of the Treasury fully advised concerning System foreign

currency operations and to consult with the Secretary on policy matters relating to

foreign currency operations;

C. From time to time, to transmit appropriate reports and information to the National

Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Policies.

8. Staff officers of the Committee are authorized to transmit pertinent information on System

foreign currency operations to appropriate officials of the Treasury Department.

9. All Federal Reserve Banks shall participate in the foreign currency operations for System

Account in accordance with paragraph 3 G(1) of the Board of Governors' Statement of

Procedure with Respect to Foreign Relationships of Federal Reserve Banks dated January 1,

1944.

By unanimous vote, the Foreign Currency Directive was reaffirmed in the form shown below.

FOREIGN CURRENCY DIRECTIVE

(Reaffirmed January 29, 2002)

1. System operations in foreign currencies shall generally be directed at countering disorderly

market conditions, provided that market exchange rates for the U.S. dollar reflect actions and

behavior consistent with the IMF Article IV, Section 1.

2. To achieve this end the System shall:

A. Undertake spot and forward purchases and sales of foreign exchange.

B. Maintain reciprocal currency ("swap") arrangements with selected foreign central

banks.

C. Cooperate in other respects with central banks of other countries and with

international monetary institutions.

3. Transactions may also be undertaken:

A. To adjust System balances in light of probable future needs for currencies.

B. To provide means for meeting System and Treasury commitments in particular

currencies and to facilitate operations of the Exchange Stabilization Fund.

C. For such other purposes as may be expressly authorized by the Committee.

4. System foreign currency operations shall be conducted:

A. In close and continuous consultation and cooperation with the United States

Treasury;

B. In cooperation, as appropriate, with foreign monetary authorities; and

C. In a manner consistent with the obligations of the United States in the International

Monetary Fund regarding exchange arrangements under the IMF Article IV.

By unanimous vote, the Procedural Instructions with Respect to Foreign Currency Operations, in

the form shown below, were reaffirmed.

PROCEDURAL INSTRUCTIONS WITH RESPECT TO

FOREIGN CURRENCY OPERATIONS

(Reaffirmed January 29, 2002)

In conducting operations pursuant to the authorization and direction of the Federal Open Market

Committee as set forth in the Authorization for Foreign Currency Operations and the Foreign

Currency Directive, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, through the Manager, System Open

Market Account ("Manager"), shall be guided by the following procedural understandings with

respect to consultations and clearances with the Committee, the Foreign Currency Subcommittee,

and the Chairman of the Committee. All operations undertaken pursuant to such clearances shall be

reported promptly to the Committee.

1. The Manager shall clear with the Subcommittee (or with the Chairman, if the Chairman

believes that consultation with the Subcommittee is not feasible in the time available):

A. Any operation that would result in a change in the System's overall open position in

foreign currencies exceeding $300 million on any day or $600 million since the most

recent regular meeting of the Committee.

B. Any operation that would result in a change on any day in the System's net position

in a single foreign currency exceeding $150 million, or $300 million when the

operation is associated with repayment of swap drawings.

C. Any operation that might generate a substantial volume of trading in a particular

currency by the System, even though the change in the System's net position in that

currency might be less than the limits specified in 1.B.

D. Any swap drawing proposed by a foreign bank not exceeding the larger of (i) $200

million or (ii) 15 percent of the size of the swap arrangement.

2. The Manager shall clear with the Committee (or with the Subcommittee, if the Subcommittee

believes that consultation with the full Committee is not feasible in the time available, or

with the Chairman, if the Chairman believes that consultation with the Subcommittee is not

feasible in the time available):

A. Any operation that would result in a change in the System's overall open position in

foreign currencies exceeding $1.5 billion since the most recent regular meeting of the

Committee.

B. Any swap drawing proposed by a foreign bank exceeding the larger of (i) $200

million or (ii) 15 percent of the size of the swap arrangement.

3. The Manager shall also consult with the Subcommittee or the Chairman about proposed swap

drawings by the System and about any operations that are not of a routine character.

On January 17, 2002, copies of the continuing rules, regulations, and other instructions of the

Committee had been distributed with the advice that, in accordance with procedures approved by

the Committee, they were being called to the Committee's attention before the January 29-30

organization meeting to give members an opportunity to raise any questions they might have

concerning them. Members were asked to indicate if they wished to have any of the instruments in

question placed on the agenda for consideration at this meeting, and no requests for consideration

were received. Accordingly, all of these instruments remained in effect in their existing form.

By unanimous vote, the minutes of the meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee held on

December 11, 2001, were approved.

The Manager of the System Open Market Account reported on recent developments in foreign

exchange markets. There were no open market operations in foreign currencies for the System's

account in the period since the previous meeting of the Committee.

The Manager also reported on developments in domestic financial markets and on System open

market transactions in government securities and federal agency obligations during the period

December 11, 2002, to January 29, 2002. By unanimous vote, the Committee ratified these

transactions.

At this meeting, members discussed staff background analyses of the implications for the conduct

of policy if the economy were to deteriorate substantially in a period when nominal short-term

interest rates were already at very low levels. Under such conditions, while unconventional policy

measures might be available, their efficacy was uncertain, and it might be impossible to ease

monetary policy sufficiently through the usual interest rate process to achieve System objectives.

The members agreed that the potential for such an economic and policy scenario seemed highly

remote, but it could not be dismissed altogether. If in the future such circumstances appeared to be

in the process of materializing, a case could be made at that point for taking preemptive easing

actions to help guard against the potential development of economic weakness and price declines

that could be associated with the so-called "zero bound" policy constraint.

The Committee then turned to a discussion of the economic and financial outlook and the

implementation of monetary policy over the intermeeting period ahead.

The information reviewed at this meeting indicated that economic activity probably steadied in the

fourth quarter after a sizable drop in the summer. Final demand appeared to have increased

appreciably, reflecting strength in consumer spending and a smaller decline in business purchases

of durable equipment and software. However, businesses met a good part of the pickup in final

demand through a large runoff of inventories, and as a consequence manufacturing activity and

payroll employment continued to weaken late in the year, though at a slower pace. Falling energy

prices and widespread discounting of goods held down consumer price inflation.

The labor market deteriorated somewhat further in December, and the unemployment rate

continued to climb, to 5.8 percent. Private nonfarm payrolls fell considerably, with manufacturing

again experiencing the largest job losses, but the decrease was less than in previous months and

aggregate hours worked by private production workers leveled out after six months of decline.

Recent data on initial claims for unemployment insurance pointed to a further moderation in

employment losses in January.

Industrial production edged down in December after having fallen sharply in previous months. A

number of industries experienced further reductions in output, with weakness most pronounced in

consumer nondurables and business equipment. In contrast, motor vehicle assemblies rose to a still

higher rate, presumably in response to the robust sales of the preceding two months, and the

production of semiconductors and computers continued to strengthen. The rate of utilization of total

manufacturing capacity declined a little further in December, and the average rate for the fourth

quarter was at its lowest quarterly level since 1983.

Growth of consumer spending strengthened considerably late in the year after a slow advance in the

third quarter. A surge in purchases of motor vehicles in response to attractive financing incentives

was a key factor in the pickup, but expenditures on goods other than motor vehicles evidently also

accelerated slightly. By contrast, spending on services expanded at a reduced pace, owing at least in

part to relatively low demand for residential heating services.

Despite unseasonably warm and dry autumn weather, residential construction slowed somewhat in

the fourth quarter. For the year as a whole, though, homebuilding and home sales remained

relatively brisk as very low mortgage rates tended to offset the effects of a weakening job market

and sluggish growth in personal income. An apparent consequence of reduced income growth and

of lower equity prices was a change in the mix of single-family homebuilding, with less emphasis

on construction of high-priced homes.

Business expenditures on durable equipment and software contracted less rapidly in the fourth

quarter, and monthly data indicated that such spending might be bottoming out late in the year

despite further decreases in business output and continuing weakness in corporate cash flows.

Business purchases of motor vehicles accounted for some of the improvement, and expenditures for

computers and related equipment apparently recorded a small gain. Elsewhere, though, acquisitions

of communications equipment were still on a downward trend, and business spending in sectors

other than high technology and transportation remained weak. Nonresidential construction declined

sharply further in the fourth quarter despite favorable weather over much of the country. Spending

on industrial structures plunged, reflecting low capacity utilization in manufacturing and rising

vacancy rates. Office building activity also fell as increasing amounts of available space and

uncertainties regarding rents and property values weighed on the office market.

Nonfarm inventory liquidation apparently was very rapid in the fourth quarter, but inventory-sales

ratios remained elevated in an environment of weak sales. The book value of manufacturing and

trade inventories plunged in October and November (latest data), but progress in getting inventory

overhangs under control was limited. In manufacturing, the sector's stock-shipments ratio persisted

at a high level despite continuing sizable rundowns in inventories since the spring. Wholesalers

apparently stepped up their runoffs of excess stocks in recent months, yet the aggregate

inventory-sales ratio for the sector had fallen only slightly since midyear. Retailers made greater

progress in reducing inventories, and despite relatively sluggish sales the sector's inventory-sales

ratio dropped considerably and appeared to be at a fairly comfortable level.

The U.S. trade deficit in goods and services narrowed slightly on balance in October and November

(latest data) from the third-quarter level (adjusted to exclude large, one-time payments by foreign

insurers related to the events of September 11) as the value of imports for the two-month period fell

by more than the value of exports. The available information suggested further slight slippage of

economic activity in the foreign industrial countries in the fourth quarter. The Japanese economy

remained very weak, economic activity in the euro area and Canada seemed to have contracted, and

growth in the United Kingdom apparently slowed. There were some indications, however, of a

brighter economic outlook ahead in the euro area, Canada, and the United Kingdom that would

result in part from monetary easing actions that their respective central banks had taken. Economic

conditions in the major emerging-market countries were mixed. There were increasing signs of a

recovery in developing Asia, especially in some of the countries that had been hurt by the global

high-tech slump, but conditions in Latin America remained relatively weak, with the Argentine

economy having deteriorated further.

Consumer price inflation was quite low at year-end. With energy prices declining, both the

consumer price index (CPI) and the personal consumption expenditure (PCE) chain-type price

index edged down on balance in November and December. Moreover, excluding the effects of

volatile oil prices, core consumer price inflation was held down late in the year by widespread

discounting of goods. Consumer price inflation as measured by the core PCE index declined

somewhat on a year-over-year basis, while core CPI inflation increased slightly in 2001. At the

producer level, core prices for finished goods changed little in November and December, and the

index for core producer inflation slowed noticeably last year. With regard to labor costs, growth of

average hourly earnings of production or nonsupervisory workers picked up in November and

December, but the average wage increase for the year was moderate and slightly less than that for

2000.

At its meeting on December 11, 2001, the Committee adopted a directive that called for

implementing conditions in reserve markets consistent with a decrease of 25 basis points in the

intended level of the federal funds rate, to about 1-3/4 percent. The members also agreed that the

balance of risks remained weighted toward conditions that could generate economic weakness in

the foreseeable future. The members noted that there were preliminary signs of some abatement of

the contractionary forces acting on the economy, but they believed that a sub-par economic

performance was likely to persist for a time. They also recognized that the stance of policy was

already quite accommodative and that much of the effect of recent monetary easing actions was yet

to be felt. In the circumstances, they saw a modest further reduction of the federal funds rate as

providing some added insurance against a more extended contraction of the economy at little risk

of a pickup in inflation.

Federal funds traded at rates close to the Committee's target level of 1-3/4 percent during the

intermeeting period. The Committee's action had been widely anticipated, but the financial markets

evidently interpreted the announcement as indicating that the FOMC's assessment of the economic

outlook was weaker than had been assumed. Corporate announcements of downward revisions to

forecasts of future revenues and capital spending also contributed to some marking down by market

participants of prospects for economic activity. Yields on Treasury coupon securities declined

slightly over the intermeeting period, risk spreads on corporate debt securities changed little, and

major indexes of equity prices edged lower on balance.

In foreign exchange markets, the trade-weighted value of the dollar in terms of the major foreign

currencies increased somewhat on balance over the intermeeting period and reached its highest

level since the mid-1980s. Weakness of the Japanese yen was an important factor in that rise, as

market participants focused on continuing problems in the Japanese economy and on comments by

Japanese officials that seemed to signal a willingness to accept a weaker value for the yen. The

dollar also appreciated slightly against the euro, perhaps reflecting a market view that the U.S.

economy was likely to lead the rebound from the global slowdown. In addition, the exchange value

of the dollar increased slightly in terms of an index of the currencies of other important trading

partners, in part because of the depreciation of the Argentine peso.

Growth of M2 slowed slightly in December from November's robust pace and moderated

considerably further in the early weeks of January. The brisk expansion of liquid deposits over

recent months had been associated with the effects of mortgage refinancing activity and the

substantial decline in the opportunity costs of such deposits that was related to previous easing

actions. The currency component of M2 also had been strong in the latter part of 2001, largely the

result of a pickup in demand for U.S. currency abroad. The debt of the domestic nonfinancial

sectors was estimated to have expanded at a slightly slower rate in December, reflecting some

moderation in business debt financing, a slightly slower pace of household borrowing, and little net

borrowing by the federal government.

The staff forecast prepared for this meeting suggested that economic activity likely would start to

turn up early in 2002 as inventory liquidation tapered off, and would gather strength only gradually.

The monetary ease and fiscal stimulus already in place would provide impetus for the recovery,

though the wealth effects of earlier reductions in equity prices, sluggish growth abroad, and the

dollar's strength would tend to offset some of that support for a time. The gradual strengthening of

the recovery would be associated with a marked slowing in the contraction of business capital

investment and the added consumer purchasing power arising from recent declines in oil prices.

Economic expansion was projected to strengthen appreciably by the second half of 2002 and

subsequently, as the climate for business fixed investment continued to improve and as a

strengthening of foreign economies led to somewhat greater demand for U.S. exports. The

unemployment rate would begin to edge down. Sub-par expansion over the next few quarters was

expected to foster an appreciable further easing of pressures on resources and some moderation in

core consumer price inflation.

In the Committee's discussion of current and prospective economic conditions, members

commented that the recent information was more positive than they had anticipated and seemed on

the whole to indicate that economic activity was bottoming out and a recovery might already be

under way. Important impetus to economic activity in the period immediately ahead likely would

be provided by a turnaround in inventory investment following several quarters of increasingly

large liquidation that had culminated in the outsized decline in inventories reported for the fourth

quarter. Looking beyond the near term, members expressed considerable uncertainty about the

prospective strength of final demand. The stimulus from fiscal and monetary actions taken in 2001,

the impetus to growth from the inducement to new investment provided by improving technology,

and the persisting uptrend in household spending would support the economic recovery. However,

household spending had been relatively robust during the cyclical downturn and likely had only

limited room for a pickup over coming quarters, and intense competitive pressures could well

constrain profits, investment, and equity prices. As a result, the members were concerned that the

acceleration in final demand could be modest, at least for a time. Against this background, the

prospects for continued low inflation remained favorable, given the currently reduced utilization of

resources and indeed the prospect for some added slack should economic growth remain below

potential in coming quarters, as many members anticipated. Moreover, the further passthrough of

earlier declines in energy prices would continue to ease pressures on prices and costs more

generally throughout the economy.

In preparing for the semi-annual monetary policy report to Congress, the Board members and

Reserve Bank presidents provided their individual projections for the growth of GDP, civilian

unemployment, and consumer price inflation for the year 2002. They projected that the economy

would begin to recover this year from the generally mild downturn experienced in 2001, but the

pace of expansion would pick up only gradually and the unemployment rate would climb somewhat

further. The central tendency of their forecasts of growth in real GDP for 2002 was 2-1/2 to 3

percent, measured as the change between the fourth quarter of 2001 and the fourth quarter of 2002,

while their forecasts of the civilian unemployment rate in the fourth quarter of the year were

centered on 6 to 6-1/4 percent. The forecasts of consumer price inflation this year, as measured by

the PCE chain-type price index, were narrowly clustered around 1-1/2 percent.

With regard to the prospective course of the projected recovery, members generally anticipated that

a positive swing in inventory investment abetted by further growth in consumer spending would

provide an important upward thrust to the expansion over the nearer term. The inventory correction

that had occurred over the past year was of a magnitude that would inevitably result in a reduced

rate of liquidation and an eventual restocking unless, contrary to current expectations, consumer

spending were to weaken markedly. The accompanying fillip to production and incomes would

have positive feedback effects over time on household expenditures and business investment. The

extent and timing of the turnaround in inventory investment for the economy as a whole were

subject to a considerable degree of uncertainty, but members noted that some firms already

appeared to have adjusted their inventories to what they viewed as acceptable levels, and there were

indications that some manufacturing firms were making efforts to rebuild inventories in the context

of improving orders. More generally, however, business firms appeared to have remained very

cautious in setting their inventory investment plans.

The evidence of unexpected strength in overall final demand indicated by the just-released GDP

report was supported by anecdotal commentary from around the nation. Regional economic reports

were somewhat mixed in that declining activity still characterized conditions in some areas, but the

pace of the declines appeared to have moderated in those areas and improved conditions were noted

in other parts of the country. Business sentiment, while still quite depressed in some areas, was

described in many reports as having shifted toward cautious optimism.

Concerning prospective developments in final demand in major sectors of the economy, several

members underscored what they viewed as the key role of household expenditures. Such spending

had held up remarkably well in the face of major adverse developments, including sharp declines in

stock market wealth and rising unemployment, that were exacerbated by the events of September

11. But with households remaining confident about the future and equity prices having rebounded

from their post-attack declines, sustained growth in household expenditures was seen as a likely

prospect. Such spending also would be supported in part by some strengthening or less weakness in

other important sectors of the economy. Some members nonetheless cited a number of potential

negatives relating to the prospects for consumer spending, including the possibility of adverse

effects on consumer confidence of further anticipated increases in unemployment and the risk that

generally disappointing business profits or more widespread downward restatements of reported

profits might generate sizable declines in stock market prices and consumer wealth. Moreover, the

unusually large sales of motor vehicles and to a degree other durable goods during the closing

months of 2001 might have borrowed to some extent from sales in coming months. On balance, the

positive and negative factors bearing on the outlook for consumer spending suggested that

moderate growth was a reasonable expectation.

Residential construction expenditures, like household spending for consumer goods and services,

had held up well despite the cyclical downturn in employment and sizable net losses in stock

market wealth. Low mortgage interest rates and, in recent months, favorable weather conditions

had provided vital support to this sector of the economy. Recent housing activity, including record

sales in some areas, suggested persisting underlying strength in residential construction. Even so,

the large additions to the supply of new homes in earlier years tended to indicate that additional

impetus, if any, from housing construction would be limited over the next several quarters.

The outlook for business capital expenditures was improving, but anecdotal reports suggested that

business executives were still notably cautious in formulating their spending plans, and indications

of accelerating capital investment were still quite limited. In the high-tech sector, positive signs

were noted in the demand for computers and peripherals, but the outlook for communications

equipment was still very negative. Business spending for other equipment was also expected to

remain soft. On balance, the capital investment sector seemed likely to retard the overall advance in

economic activity during the quarters immediately ahead as many firms continued to pare excess

capacity and businesses awaited clearer indications of rising demand and profits. Beyond the nearer

term, however, the favorable outlook for productivity growth and related profit opportunities

pointed to a revival of robust capital spending. Indeed, past experience suggested that once a

rebound in capital spending took hold it easily could exceed current forecasts of moderate

acceleration.

Fiscal policy would continue to provide substantial stimulus to the economy this year in light of the

ongoing effects of the tax reduction measures enacted in 2001 and the sharp increase in federal

government spending in train. This outlook did not incorporate the possible enactment of further

tax cut legislation, whose prospects now seemed to be remote. A partial offset to federal

government stimulus was the likelihood of considerably reduced spending growth at the state and

local government levels, where numerous government entities were experiencing severe budget

strains associated with recession-related weakness in tax revenues.

The external sector of the economy was seen as a source of some potential downside for the

domestic economy in the period just ahead. Generally weak foreign economies and the recent

strength of the dollar in foreign exchange markets were expected to continue to restrain U.S.

exports. Economic recoveries in many foreign nations seemed likely over the course of this year,

but the strength of those recoveries was subject to considerable uncertainty, and the risk that serious

difficulties in some important economies might spread could not be overlooked. Recovery abroad,

notably in some key U.S. trading partners, would be tied to an important extent to the course of

U.S. economic activity and would not be providing much impetus to U. S. exports over coming

quarters. At this point signs of an upturn in foreign trade were not entirely lacking, notably in some

high-tech goods, but those indications were still very limited.

Inflation was likely to remain quite subdued. Indeed, core inflation could well edge lower. The

indirect effects of the declines that had occurred in energy prices would continue to hold down

other input prices and be passed on more fully to final purchasers. More generally, the low rate of

resource utilization anticipated over the year ahead, rising productivity, and highly competitive

market pricing could be expected to moderate price pressures. Against that background, members

continued to view the greater risks to the economy as those relating to concerns about economic

activity rather than prices.

In the Committee's discussion of policy for the intermeeting period ahead, all the members agreed

that recent developments argued for keeping the stance of policy unchanged at this time. Monetary

policy had been eased substantially over the past year, and, with the real federal funds rate at an

unusually low level, policy seemed well positioned to support an economic recovery as the forces

restraining demand abated. In fact, a growing number of indicators pointed to a reduction in the

pressures holding back the economy and to an emerging business recovery. In these circumstances,

a pause seemed desirable to monitor the still-incomplete effects of the Committee's easing over the

past year--a significant part of which had been implemented in recent months--and the contours of

the turnaround in economic activity.

All the members indicated that they could support the issuance of a public statement indicating that

the risks remained tilted toward economic weakness. Although the economy was probably

strengthening, a variety of factors could well keep the pace of expansion below the rate of growth

of potential for a while, even at the current policy stance. Moreover, inflation was running at a

fairly low rate and quite possibly would edge down a little further over coming quarters. In these

circumstances, the risk to achieving the Committee's objective for fostering sustainable economic

growth seemed to be greater than to its objective of maintaining reasonable price stability. In the

view of a few members, an argument could be made for moving to a balanced-risks statement,

given that they could envisage developments that could strengthen the economy beyond their

current forecasts. However, they agreed that a shift to balanced risks in conjunction with an

unchanged policy stance could at this point be misread in financial markets as an indication of a

much more optimistic view of the economic outlook than the members currently entertained. Such

an interpretation might foster unwarranted and counterproductive adjustments in financial markets.

In any event, emerging economic conditions in line with the members' current forecasts would

provide ample opportunity to shift to a balanced-risks statement at a future meeting when it might

be more clearly appropriate.

At the conclusion of this discussion, the Committee voted to authorize and direct the Federal

Reserve Bank of New York, until it was instructed otherwise, to execute transactions in the System

Account in accordance with the following domestic policy directive:

The Federal Open Market Committee seeks monetary and financial conditions that will

foster price stability and promote sustainable growth in output. To further its long-run

objectives, the Committee in the immediate future seeks conditions in reserve markets

consistent with maintaining the federal funds rate at an average of around 1-3/4

percent.

The votes encompassed approval of the sentence below for inclusion in the press statement to be

released shortly after the meeting.

Against the background of its long-run goals of price stability and sustainable

economic growth and of the information currently available, the Committee believes

that the risks continue to be weighted mainly toward conditions that may generate

economic weakness in the foreseeable future.

Votes for this action: Messrs. Greenspan, McDonough, Ms. Bies, Messrs. Ferguson,

Gramlich, Jordan, McTeer, Olson, Santomero, and Stern.

Vote against this action: None.

Absent and not voting: Mr. Meyer.

Disclosure Policy

In accordance with the Committee's routine practice of reviewing its rules and regulations at its first

regular meeting of each year, the members discussed their policies regarding the extent of the

information that is released to the public about its discussions and decisions along with the timing

of the release of such information. They noted that the changes in disclosure policy and practices

implemented in recent years, including the announcement of policy actions and brief explanations

of the basis for those actions, have served both the Federal Reserve and the public well. They also

believed that it would be appropriate to explore whether there might be scope for some further

evolution in the Committee's policies in the direction of greater transparency, though additional

study and analysis would be needed. They agreed to discuss the issues further at a future meeting.

It also was agreed that the next meeting of the Committee would be held on Tuesday, March 19,

2002.

The meeting adjourned at 12:30 p.m. on January 30, 2002.

Donald L. Kohn

Secretary

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Footnotes

1. Attended Tuesday session only. Return to text

2. Attended portion of meeting relating to the discussion of monetary policy near the zero

bound on nominal interest rates. Return to text

3. Attended portion of meeting relating to the above discussion and to the Committee's

review of the economic outlook. Return to text

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Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (2002, January 29). FOMC Minutes. Fomc Minutes, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/fomc_minutes_20020130
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_fomc_minutes_20020130,
  author = {Federal Reserve},
  title = {FOMC Minutes},
  year = {2002},
  month = {Jan},
  howpublished = {Fomc Minutes, Federal Reserve},
  url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/fomc_minutes_20020130},
  note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}