Greenbook/Tealbook
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
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CONFIDENTIAL (FR) CLASS II
March 17, 1978
- FOMC
SUPPLEMENT CURRENT ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CONDITIONS
Prepared for the Federal Open Market Committee
By the Staff Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
TABLE OF CONTENTS Section
Page
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY Total private housing starts ............................ Personal income ... .................................... Impact of coal shortages on employment................... The book value of manufacturing and trade inventories....................................
1 2 3 3
TABLES: Private housing starts and residential building permits .......................... .............
2
Business inventories ...................................
5
THE DOMESTIC FINANCIAL ECONOMY TABLE:
Interest rates............................................
7
APPENDIX
Senior loan officer opinion survey on banking lending practices ..........................
A-1
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES The Domestic Nonfinancial Economy Total private housing starts rose 2 per cent in February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.58 million units, after posting the sharpest decline, 30 per cent, of the post-war period in the previous month.
For much of February,
as was the case in January, adverse weather
conditions apparently were a substantial factor inhibiting starts.
Starts
of single-family units fell nearly 6 per cent in February to an annual rate of 1.09 million units, the lowest rate since January of last year. Multifamily starts, on the other hand,
increased 25 per cent last month
to a rate of 489 thousand units per year, after declining by nearly two-thirds in the preceding month.
Starts activity by region was mixed.
In the Northeast and South, total starts in February were down 39 per cent and 10 per cent, respectively, while they rose 43 per cent in the North Central States and 5 per cent in the West. Residential building permits increased 8 per cent in February to an 1.62 million units rate, after a drop of 17 per cent in January. As with starts, all of the February increase in permits was in multifamily units, which rose 40 per cent to the highest rate since early 1974.
Single-family permits declined 6 per cent further in February.
-2-
PRIVATE HOUSING STARTS AND RESIDENTIAL BUILDING PERMITS _
__
STARTS 1 - family 2 - or more - family Northeast North Central South West PERMITS 1 - family 2 - or more - family Northeast North Central
South West
(Thousands of units at Per cent seasonally adjusted annual rate)change from: Dec. Jan. Feb. Jan. Feb. 1977(r)
1978(r)
2,203
1,547
1,574 629
19
78
(p)
1978
1977
1,580
+2
- 10
1,155 392
1,091 489
-6 +25
- 20 + 26t,
119 432 905 667
118 281 654 494
72 402 588 518
-39 +43 -10 + 5
- 40 - 2 - 10 - 9
1,811
1,496
1,622
+ 8
+
1,210 601
1,027 469
967 655
- 6 +40
- 9 + 41
187 392 662 570
152 276 545 523
202 368 507 545
+33 +33 - 7 + 4
+ 68 + 7 + 4 - 5
324
322
269
-17
-
MEMO:
Mobile home shipments
NOTE:
r - revised, p - preliminary.
6
2
Personal income in February increased $8.2 billion to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1,634.1 billion.
Wage and salary disbursements
rose almost as much last month as total income; the increase in these was reduced by about $1-1/2 billion (in annual rate terms) because of layoffs resulting from coal and electricity shortages.
Other types of income
except that of farm proprietors also increased; farm income declined sharply
again in February but not as much as in January.
-3-
The impact of coal shortages on employment in manufacturing and trade establishments in eleven coal-dependent states declined during the week ended March 11, according to a special survey of large
establishments in 11 mid-western states by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Approximately 22,900 factory workers were on layoff for all or part of that week because of coal and electricity shortages.
Workers on
layoff in manufacturing were down 2,600 from the preceding week, were less than had been anticipated by employers responding to the survey a week earlier, and were a quite small proportion of the 7.8 million factory workers in those States.
Aggregate hours worked in manufacturing
were reduced by about 1.3 per cent in the March 5 to 11 week because of coal shortages, down from an 1.8 per cent reduction in the previous week.
Cutbacks in employment in trade establishments were limited
during that week, as earlier, and the reduction in aggregate hours was unchanged from 3.0 per cent in the preceding week. The book value of manufacturing and trade inventories increased at a $26.0 billion annual rate in January, after a small decline in December.
The January rise was more than twice that in the
final quarter of last year but about the same as for the year as a
whole.
Sales (or shipments) by manufacturers, merchant wholesalers,
and retailers each declined in in that inventory buildup.
January,
and apparentlywere factors
The inventory to sales ratio for manu-
facturing and trade businesses increased to 1.46 in January from 1.41 in December; for each of these types of business the inventory to sales ratio rose in January. The over-all inventory increase in January was fairly evenly divided between durable goods, and also among manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers.
At wholesale establishments the buildup was
mainly in nondurable goods, while at retailers in durable goods--mainly at establishments handling automotive products and building, hardware, and related products.
BUSINESS INVENTORIES (Change at annual rates in seasonally adjusted book value; billions of dollars)
1975 Manufacturing and trade
1976
mm
1975
1977
QI I
QII
1978
QIII I QIV
Dec. I, Jan.
-3.4
24.5
34.2
32.1
26.4
12.5
-. 5
26.0
Durable
-1.3
12.4
17.6
20.2
19.2
11.3
8.4
13.6
Nondurable
-2.1
12.1
16.6
11.9
1.2
-8.9
12.5
-1.2
13.6
23.0
14.3
17.1
10.3
4.8
17.0
4.7
7.5
11.4
8.1
12.4
2.8
-6.6
8.9
1.3
1.8
-. 6
Trade, total Wholesale Retail Auto
-1.4
6.2
12.0
.3
7.4
11.1
-,8
1.8
2.2
2.6 11.8 2.4
7.3
6.5
INVENTORY/SALES RATIO
-
"
1975
1976
QI
QII
1977 QIII
QIV
Dec.
Jan.
Manufacturing and trade
1.58
1.48
1.46
1.46
1.48
1.44
1.41
1.46
Trade, total
1.35
1.33
1.34
1.34
1.36
1.33
1.31
1.36
Wholesale
1.24
1.22
1.24
1.21
1.24
1.23
1.19
1.22
Retail
1.45
1.42
1.42
1.45
1.48
1.43
1.42
1.49
1978
Inventory to sales:
-6-
The Domestic Financial Economy No textual addendums to the Greenbook were required, but the usual updating of interest rate developments is contained in the table on page 7.
INTEREST RATES (One day quotes--in per cent)
1977
1978 Lows
Feb. 27
Mar. 16
6.65(12/28)
4.47(1/5)
6.80(3/1)
6.77(3/15)
6.36(10/13) 6.68(12/30) 6.75(12/29) 7.56(12/29)
4.39(4/28)
4.63(1/10) 4.66(1/3) 4.88(1/5)
6.40 6.75 6.80 7.31
6.25 6.75 6.80 7.25
6.70(12/21)
4.50(1/5)
6.75(2/22)
6.73(3/15)
6.55(10/13) 6.75(10/18)
4.54(1/3) 4.63(1/7)
6.70 6.78
6.60 6.79
6.92(11/9)
4.65(1/5)
7.13(2/22)
7.13(3/15)
6.64(10/13)
4.66(1/3)
6.83
6.79
7.10(12/28) 3.65(12/30)
5.00(1/5) 2.65(1/7)
7.38(2/22) 3.60(2/24)
7.25(3/15) 3.60(3/17)
7.40(12/29) 7.77(12/29) 8.00(12/29)
5.73(1/3) 6.50(1/3) 7.20(1/3)
7.70 7.94 8.20
7.64
8.30(12/28) 9.18(2/25) 8.36(12/16) 8.48(12/30)
7.87(1/5) 8.77(9/9) 7.90(1/5) 7.95(1/5)
8.48 9.21
8.45
5.93(2/2) 8.98(12/26)
Highs
Short-Term Rates Federal funds (wkly avg.) 3-month Treasury bills (bid) Comm. paper (90-119 days) Bankers' acceptances Euro-dollars CDs (NYC) 90 days Most often quoted new 6-month Treasury bills (bid) Comm. paper (4-6 mos.) CDs (NYC) 180 days Most often quoted new 1-year Treasury bills (bid) CDs (NYC) Most often quoted new Prime municipal note Intermediate- and Long-Term Treasury (constant maturity) 3-year 7-year 20-year Corporate Seasoned Aaa Baa Aaa Utility New Issue Recently offered Municipal Bond Buyer index
7.91
8.17
8.71(2/24)
9.21 -- (3/17)
8.70(2/24)
8 .6 4p( 3 /17
5.45(11/17)
5.65(2/23)
5.58
8.46(1/12)
9.35(2/22)
9.36(3/6)
Mortgage--average yields in
FNMA auction
FR 2018 Approved by Federal Resrve Board Approval expiresJanuary, 1980
FOR F.R. USE ONLY
ATTACHMENT A
December 1977
SENIOR LOAN OFFICER OPINION SURVEY ON BANK LENDING PRACTICES FOR
The purpose of this questionnaire is to obtain information on recent changes in bank practices regarding selected types of loans. ALL DISCUSSION OF LOANS IN THIS SURVEY SHOULD BE RESTRICTED TO LOANS AT DOMESTIC OFFICES. The questionnaire should be completed by a senior officer thoroughly familiar with the lending practices of the bank in the areas covered. The views expressed will be treated as unofficial.
LOAN DEMAND
Much Stronger
Moderately Stronger
Essentially Unchanged
Moderately Weaker
Much Weaker
Much Firmer
Moderately Firmer
Essentially Unchanged
Moderately Easier
Much Easier
Much
Moderately
Essentialy
Moderately
Much
Firmer
Firmer
Unchanged
Easier
Easier
1. Indicate the strength of demand for commercial and industrial loans (after allowing for your bank's usual seasonal variation) now as compared with three months ago. ......... 2. Indicate how strong the demand for commercial and industrial loans (after allowing for your bank's usual seasonal variations) is expected to be during the next three months as compared with now ............................ INTEREST RATE POLICIES With respect to the commercial and industrial loan terms and conditions listed below, indicate your bank's practices now as comared with three months ago. 3. Standards of credit worthiness to qualify for prime rate .... 4. Standards of credit worthiness to qualify for a given spread above prime and/or the structure of spreads between the prime rate and lending rates to nonprime borrowers. .......
Willingness to make short-term (maturities under one year) loans with predeterminedrates... ...... . ... . 6. Willingness to make long-term (maturities of one year or more) loans with predetermined rates ................
5.
CREDIT AVAILABILITY AND NONPRICE TERMS
Indicate your bank's practices now as compared to three months earlier regarding approval of lines of credit or loan applications for commercial and industrial loans for the types of borrowers listed below. 7. Established customers .......... . . . .... ..... 8. New customers............................... 9. Local service area customers ................. .... 10. Nonlocal service area customers ...................
Indicate what the size and enforcement of compensating balance requirements for the types of loans listed below are now as compared to three months earlier. 11. Commercial and industrial loans. ................... 12. Loans to finance companies ........ ..............
Indicate your bank's willingness to make the type of loans listed below now as compared to three months ago. 13. Construction and land development loans secured by real estate .. ................................... 14. Real estate loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties ....... ..... . ... ................ 15. Real estate loans secured by multi-family (5 or more) residential properties .. . ......................... 16. Commercial and industrial loans secured by real estate . .. 17. Instalment loans to individuals .......... ... ....... 18. Commercial and industrial loans of 1 to 5-year maturity.... 19. Commercial and industrial loans of over 5-year maturity. ... . ..... ... 20. Loans to finance companies....... . . 21. Loans to brokers and dealers in securities. ............. 22. Participation loans originated by correspondent banks .....
Moderately Greater
Considerably Greater
_
Essentially Unchanged
Moderately Less
Considerably Less
T-
_
1
If convenient, please provide illustrative detail regarding the specific types of loans affected by recent changes in lending practices.
If you have reported significant changes in lending practices, we would also appreciate a description of the particular situation which has brought about changed lending practices at your bank.
Name of bank officer completing this report (PLEASE PRINT)
Name and location of bank
Title
This report is authorized by law [12 U.S.C. §248(a)and 12U.S.C.§248(1)]. Your voluntary cooperation in submitting this report is needed to make the results comprehensive, accurate, and timely,
The Federal Reserve System regards the individual bank information provided by each respondent as confidential. If it should be determined subsequently that any information collected on this form must be released, respondents will be notified.
PLEASE RETURN THE COMPLETED QUESTIONNAIRE TO REACH THE FINANCIAL STATISTICS DIVISION, ROOM 901, FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF NEW YORK FOR RECEIPT NO LATER THAN THE THIRD BUSINESS DAY AFTER THE REPORT DATE.
APPENDIX SENIOR LOAN OFFICER OPINION SURVEY ON BANK LENDING PRACTICES* The Federal Reserve's quarterly survey of lending practices at large banks has been revised in a number of ways, in particular to improve our understanding of the general interest rate policies regarding term loans. (The new survey form is Attachment A.) The new survey will continue to be taken on the 15th of the mid-month of each quarter,
and the results of the new survey taken in February 1978 at 121 large banks are attached (Attachment B). The general cast of the survey results is different in one regard from a typical example of the predecessor survey. The range of responses to individual questions on lending terms is wider than had normally been the case; senior lending
officers may have read the new survey form more carefully than had been their practice and as a consequence answered the questions more carefully. Over 30 per cent of the 121 senior loan officers respond-
ing to the survey taken in mid-February reported moderately stronger business loan demand than three months earlier. About 55 per cent of the respondents anticipated a further strengthening in business loan demands in the next three months, somewhat higher than the 45 per cent who were expecting stronger loan demand at the time of the November survey. Changes in price and nonprice terms of lending were mixed, and the tilt toward a firming of loan policies noted in the August and November surveys was not continued in February. The prime rate charged by major banks was raised just prior to the November survey and again in early January, increasing from 7 1/2 per cent to 8 per cent in these two steps. In prior surveys, a climate of rising rates would have insured that a substantial number of respondents to the lending practices survey would have reported that their interest rate policies had tightened. From the old survey, it was impossible to tell whether such a tightening meant that bank lending rates had risen relative to market rates or had simply risen absolutely. The new survey attempts to clarify this issue by asking respondents several questions about interest rates on commercial and industrial loans. For example, respondents are now asked whether they have firmed or eased standards of credit-worthiness to qualify for the prime rate and what their policies are for spreads between the prime and actual lending rates. In the February survey, responses to these two questions were *
Prepared by Patricia Davis and Paul Boltz, Economists, Banking Section, Division of Research and Statistics.
A-2
mixed, and on balance moves toward ease at some banks were matched by tightening moves at others.
A noticeable minority of banks indicated an increased willingness to make fixed rate short-term business loans, in response to another new question on the survey. For term loans, responses were much more diverse, with no trend discernible in willingness to
make fixed-rate loans. It is notable, however, that the majority of responses indicating increased willingness to make term loans with fixed rates were from very large money center banks with assets of over $5 billion. On nonprice terms, a growing number of respondents continued to report an easing of compensating balance requirements compared to those reporting firmer requirements--particularly on commercial and industrial loans. The banks reporting easing requirements were almost evenly divided between the two size groups. More than 80 per cent of the respondents reported no change in their policies related to reviewing credit lines or loan applications. A noticeable number of banks continued to report a greater willingness to make consumer instalment and single-family mortgage loans. Participation loans with correspondents also were cited by 12 per cent of the respondents as an area in which their banks were allocating increased loan funds. The pattern of responses concerning other categories of loans was essentially unchanged from recent surveys. The February survey indicated both easing and firming of price and nonprice lending terms. On balance, however, the results showed little change in lending policies at the majority of banks.
ATTACHMENT 3 TABLE
1
PAGE
SENIOR LOAN
OFFICER OPINION SURVEY ON BANK LENDING PRACTICES AT SELECTED LARGE BANKS IN THE U.S. (STATUS OF POLICY ON FEBRUARY 15, 1978 COMPARED TO THREE MONTHS EARLIER) (NUMBER OF BANKS & PERCENT OF TOTAL BANKS ANSWERING QUESTION)
MUCH STRONGER BANKS
PCT
MODERATELY STRONGER BANKS
PCT
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED BANKS
DEM A N D
LO AN
PCT
MODERATELY EASIER BANKS
PCT
MUCH EASIER BANKS
PCT
TOTAL BANKS ANSWERING
STRENGTH O F DEMAND FOR COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL LOANS (AFTER ALLOWANCE FOR BANKS USUAL SEASONAL VARIATION): 1.
COMPARED TO
2.
ANTICIPATED DEMAND IN NEXT 3 MONTHS
THREE MONTHS EARLIER
MUCH FIRMER BANKS
INTEREST
RATE
PCT
38
31.5
77
121
67
55.4
51
121
MODERATELY FIRMER
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED
MUCH EASIER
PCT
BANKS
5
4.2
109
5
4.2
0
0.0
120
14
11.6
90
16
13.3
O
0.0
121
BANKS
PCT
MODERATELY EASIER BANKS
PCT
BANKS
PCT
POLICY
STANDARDS OF CREDIT WORTHINESS: 3.
TO QUALIFY FOR PRIME RATE
1
0.9
4.
TO QUALIFY FOR SPREAD ABOVE PRIME
1
0.9
CONSIDERABLY GREATER
MODERATELY GREATER
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED
MODERATELY LESS BANKS
PCT
MUCH LESS
PCT
BANKS
PCT
BANKS
PCT
0
0.0
18
14.9
95
78.6
7
5.8
1
0.9
121
1
0.9
22
18.2
68
56.2
26
21.5
4
3.4
121
BANKS
BANKS
PCT
WILLINGNESS TO MAKE FIXED RATE LOANS: 5.
SHORT-TERM (UNDER
6.
LONG-TERM (ONE YEAR OR LONGER)
ONE YEAR)
MUCH FIRMER BANKS A V A
CREDIT NONPR
IC
I
I L A TERMS
REVIEWING CREDIT LINES APPLICATIONS FOR:
OR
T Y
L
ESITABLLSEu CUSTOMtkkS
B.
NEW CUSTOMERS
9.
LOCAL SERVICE AREA CUSTOMERS
11. 12.
COMMERCIAL & LOANS
INDUSTRIAL LOANS
TO FINANCE COMPANIES
BANKS
13.
SECURED CONSTRUCTION & LAND DVLPMNT
PROPERTIES
14.
1-4 FAMILY RESIDENTIAL
15.
MULTI-FAMILY RESIUENTIAL PROPERTY
16.
COMMERCIAL
17.
INSTALLMENT
18.
& INDUSTRIAL
PROPERTY
LOANS TO INDIVIDUALS
AND INDUSTRIAL LOANS OF:
1-5 YEARS MATURITY OVER
5 YEARS MATURITY
LOANS TO FINANCE COMPANIES ~I.
PCT
BANKS
PCT
BANKS
PCT
2
1.7
117
96.7
13
10.9
98
61.7
6
5.0
110
91.7
13
11.0
101
84.9
15
12.4
79
65.3
27
22.4
5
4.2
109
90.1
6
5.0
PCT
MODERATELY GREATER BANKS
PCT
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED BANKS
PCT
MUCH LESS
MODERATELY LESS BANKS
PCT
BANKS
PCT
TO MAKE OTHER TYPES OF LOANS:
SECURED REAL ESTATE LOANS:
COMMERCIAL
BANKS
MUCH EASIER
REQUIREMENTS FOR:
CONSIDERABLY GREATER
WILLINGNESS
PCT
MODERATELY EASIER
AND
NONLOCAL SERVICE AREA CUSTOMERS
COMPENSATING BALANCE
BANKS
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED
LOAN
7.
10.
PCT
MODERATELY FIRMER
LOANS TO SECURITIES BROKERS
22. PARTICIPATION LOANS WITH CORRESPONDENT BANKS
& DEALERS
0
0.0
14
11.6
95
78.6
12
10.0
0
0.0
121
Cite this document
Federal Reserve (1978, March 20). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19780321_part2
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_19780321_part2,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {1978},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19780321_part2},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}