Greenbook/Tealbook
Prefatory Note
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1
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CONFIDENTIAL (FR) CLASS II - FOMC
March 14, 1980
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
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY Industrial production and capacity utilization .
. ..
1
. . .
3
Commercial Bank Credit and Short- and IntermediateTerm Business Credit . . . . ... . . . ..... .
4
Monetary Aggregates.
..
5
Selected Financial Market Quotations . . . . . . .
6
ERRATA:
Chart
. . . . . .
.. . . .
. .
THE DOMESTIC FINANCIAL ECONOMY TABLES:
......
.
. . . . . .
APPENDIX A: Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices
. .
.
.
.
. . . .
. ..
. .
.
. .
A-1
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES Industrial production and capacity utilization Industrial production edged up 0.2 percent in February.
This
advance mainly reflected a large increase in output of automobiles, trucks, and related parts from very low January levels; if production of motor vehicles and parts and related items had been unchanged in February, industrial production would have edged down 0.2 percent. The index for February is 0.7 percent above a year earlier and equal to its recent high in March 1979. Production of consumer goods increased 0.9 percent in February mainly because of the rise in output of autos and utility vehicles.
Autos were assembled at an annual rate of 7.2 million units--
about 19 percent higher than the January rate, but still about 19 percent below the rate in February 1979.
Other consumer durable goods
production declined 0.6 percent, while production of nondurable consumer goods increased slightly further in February.
Business equipment output
rose 0.3 percent; this rise was primarily due to increases in transit equipment and building and mining equipment and followed increases of 0.6 percent in January and 1.0 percent in December.
Output of construc-
tion supplies decreased 0.8 percent last month. Output of materials edged down in February, reflecting declines in the production of basic steel, nondurable goods materials, and energy materials.
Among durable goods materials, output of parts for consumer
durables increased more than 3 percent due to the large rise in automobile assemblies, while production of equipment parts declined 0.5 percent following a 2 percent rise in January.
1
Manufacturers operated at 84.2 percent of capacity in February, the same as in the preceding two months.
Capacity utilization by
producers of industrial materials edged down 0.2 percentage point to 86.1 percent.
The utilization rate for primary processing industries
declined last month and was the lowest since mid-1978; the utilization rate for advanced processing industries edged up slightly in February and was at the level of late last fall.
For producers of industrial
materials, a rise in the utilization rate for producers of consumer durable goods parts about offset widespread declines in operating rates of other materials producers.
ERRATA:
CAPITAL SPENDING COMMITMENTS
Seasonally adjusted Billions of 1972 dollars, Ratio scale
NEW ORDERS NONDEFENSE CAPITAL GOODS
_14
-412 Total
Machinery
I
1977
MANUFACTURERS'
1978
-4
I
1979
I
6
1980
NEWLY APPROVED CAPITAL APPROPRIATIONS
Quarterly rate, Billions of 1972 dollars
14
10
- 6
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
I 1980
2
REVISED -4-
COMMERCIAL BANK CREDIT AND SHORT- AND INTERMEDIATE-TERM BUSINESS CREDIT (Percentage changes at annual rates, based on seasonally adjusted data) 1
Q2
Q3
---------1.
2.
Total loans and investments at banks 2
Investments
Q4
11.9
15.8
3.4
12.8
17.9
5.4
8.5
3.5
4.2
14.7
Treasury securities
3.8
1.7
-5.9
4.
Other securities
6.2
12.1
14.2
Total loans 2
1.5
8.3
10.0
13.1
9.2
18.2
3.3
15.8
19.0
12.9
5.8
20.9
23.8
17.2
16.6
22.7
7.
Security loans
38.1
8.7
-88.5
8.
Real estate loans
13.0
14.7
14.2
12.9
9.
Consumer loans
12.4
7.5
5.5
6.6
Total short- and intermediateterm business credit (sum of lines 13,14 and 15)
11.5
18.0
Business loans
10.
e
-7.7
6.
-
Feb.
Commercial Bank Credit -------------
3.
5.
Jan.
'79 to Feb. '80e Feb.
1980
1979
-19.7
-19.8
-16.6
13.2
14.5
n.a.
n.a.
Short- and Intermediate-Term Business Credit --
20.1
27.4
6.3
24.4
n.a.
n.a.
Business loans net of bankers acceptances 1
16.6
21.7
6.2
22.4
21.2
17.1
Commercial paper issued by nonfinancial firms 3
65.7
69.7
15.5
81.6
49.7
65.2
13.
Sum of lines 11 & 12
20.3
25.7
7.0
28.0
24.0
20.6
14.
Finance company loans to business 4
17.7
9.4
4.0
-8.5
n.a.
n.a.
Total bankers acceptances outstanding4
23.3
74.9
4.6
52.3
n.a.
n.a.
11.
12.
15.
1. Average of Wednesdays for domestic chartered banks and average of current and preceding ends of months for foreign-related institutions. 2. Loans include outstanding amounts of loans reported as sold outright to a bank's own foreign branches, unconsolidated nonbank affiliates of the bank, the bank's holding company (if not a bank), and unconsolidated nonbank subsidiaries of the holding company. 3. Average of Wednesdays. 4. Based on average of current and preceding ends of months. e--estimated. n.a.--not available.
UPDATED -5-
MONETARY AGGREGATES (Based on seasonally adjusted data unless otherwise noted)l 1979 Q2
Q3
---Money stock measures 1. M-1A 2. M-1B 3. M-2 4. M-3 Selected components 5. Currency 6. Demand deposits 7. Other checkable deposits, NSA 2 8. M-2 minus M-1B (9+10+11+14) 9. Overnight RPs and Eurodollars, NSA 3 10. Money market mutual fund shares, NSA Savings deposits 11. at commercial banks 12. at thrift institutions 13. 14. Small time deposits 15. at commercial banks at thrift institutions 16. 17. Large time deposits 18 at commercial banks, net 19. at thrift institutions 20. Term RPs, NSA
Feb. '79 to Feb. '8 0 e
Percentage Change at Annual Rates --
7.8 10.7 10.2 8.8
8.8 10.1 10.3 10.3
4.7 5.3 7.2 9.9
8.1 7.6 102.8 10.0 35.4 204.1 -9.7 -7.4 11.8 20.4 22.5 19.3 -4.8 -9.0 40.9 34.6
11.1 8.0 46.7 10.4 -4.7 166.2 -1.5 -0.4 -2.5 14.4 21.5 10.4 9.5 2.5 72.2 13.8
8.1 3.4 15.7 7.8 -17.3 120.0 -21.0 -15.1 -26.0 24.5 28.6 22.3 30.3 22.6 90.8 5.4
-Average MEMORANDA: 21. Managed liabilities at commercial banks (22+23) 22. Large time deposits, gross 23. Nondeposit funds 24. Net due to related foreign institutions, NSA 25. Other 5 26. U.S. government deposits at commercial banks 6
Q4
1980 e p Jan. Feb.
3.6 4.3 6.8 7.8
13.6 -0.5 22.2 7.7 39.8 151.4 -13.2 -11.7. -14.6 10.5 24.6 2.0 15.9 8.3 63.4 0.0
11.9 11.4 10.8 11.7
7.5 8.9 9.5 9.9
10.1 12.7 0.0 10.6 4.8 188.2 -22.1 -16.7 -26.8 17.8 28.1 11.8 24.9 20.2 52.7 -39.6
9.4 6.8 52.8 10.3 5.9 291.7 -12.0 -9.1 -14.4 20.4 27.5 16.5 12.8 5.5 87.1 10.6
Monthly Change in Billions of Dollars--
1.8 -3.0 4.8
9.5 4.3 5.2
-1.5 2.2 -3.7
4.2 1.1 3.1
13.1 6.0 7.1
4.3 1.4 2.9
3.6 1.3
2.9 2.2
-2.2 -1.4
0.8 3.9
1.3 5.9
1.5 1.4
1.0
0.6
-1.1
4.6
-1.5
0.2
1. Quarterly growth rates are computed on a quarterly average basis. 2. Consists of ATS and NOW balances at all institutions, credit union share draft balances, and demand deposits at mutual savings banks. 3. Overnight and continuing contract RPs issued to the nonbank public by commercial banks, net of amounts held by money market mutual funds, plus overnight Eurodollar deposits issued by Caribbean branches of U.S. member banks to U.S. nonbank customers. 4. Net of large denomination time deposits held by money market mutual funds and thrift institutions. 5. Consists of nondeposit borrowings of commercial banks from nonbank sources, calculated as the sum of federal funds purchased, security RPs, other liabilities for borrowed money (including borrowings from the Federal Reserve), and loans sold less interbank borrowings. 6. Consists of Treasury demand deposits at commercial banks and Treasury note balances. e--estimated. n.a.-not available. p--preliminary.
SELECTED FINANCIAL MARKET QUOTATIONS (Percent) ____
__i:_
1
1974 High
FOMC Oct. 5
1979-19802 FOMC FOMC Jan. 9 Feb. 5
Federal funds 3
13.55
11.91
13.94
12.80
16.45
4.54
2.51
3.65
Treasury bills 3-month 6-month 1-year
9.63 9.75 9.54
10.70 10.63 10.28
11.76 11.75 10.76
12.22 12.11 11.60
15.12 14.98 13.86
4.42 4.34 3.58
3.36 3.23 3.10
2.90 2.87 2.26
Commercial paper 1-month 3-month 6-month
12.25 12.25 12.00
11.73 11.86 11.84
13.07 13.04 12.50
13.02 13.09 12.85
16.54 16.77 16.36
4.81 4.91 4.52
3.47 3.73 3.86
3.52 3.68 3.51
Large negotiable CDs4 1-month 3-month 6-month
12.58 12.64 12.30
12.09 12.50 12.80
13.33 13.36 13.33
13.23 13.46 13.70
17.24 17.86 17.86
5.15 5.36 5.06
3.91 4.50 4.53
4.01 4.40 4.16
Eurodollar deposit3 1-month 3-month
13.78 14.01
12.45 12.79
14.59 14.56
13.94 14.29
17.86 18.58
5.41 5.79
3.27 4.02
3.92 4.29
Bank prime rate
12.00
13.50
15.25
15.25
17.75
4.25
2.50
2.50
U.S. Treasury (constant maturity) 3-year 10-year 30-year
8.84 8.14 n.a.
10.01
9.60 9.36
10.68 10.58 1J.29
12.10 11.73 11.64
13.85 12.50 12.19
3.84 2.90 2.83
3.17 1.92 1.90
1.75 .77 .55
Municipal (Bond Buyer)
7.15
6.64
7.32
7.52
9.08
2.44
1.76
1.56
Corporate Aaa New issue Recently offered
10.61 10.52
10.22 10.25
-
13.95p
3.73
11.42
12.35
13.75p
3.50
2.33
1.40
Primary conventional mortgages 7
10.03
11.35
12.85
12.85
14.00
2.65
1.15
1.15
197 Low
FOMC Oct. 5
FOMC Jan. 9
FOMC Feb. 5
Mar.
FOMC Oct. 5
FOMC Jan. 9
FOMC Feb. 5
577.60 32.89 58.26 54.87
897.61 63.39 235.15 152.29
850.09 62.72 251.75 151.60
876.62 65.83 278.25 162.20
809.56 60.20 266.11 144.98
-88.05 -3.19 30.96 -7.31
-40.53 -2.52 14.36 -6.62
-67.06 -5.63 -12.14 -17.22
_I
Mar. 13
I Change from: FOMC FOMC FOMC Oct. 5 Jan. 9 Feb. 5
rt-term rates
Intermediate- and longterm rates
Stock prices Dow-Jones Industrial NYSE Composite AMEX Composite NASDAQ (OTC) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Statement week averages except where noted. One-day quotes except as noted. Averages for statement week closest to date shown. Secondary market. One-day quotes for preceding Thursday. Averages for preceding week. One-day quotes for preceding Friday. Calendar week averages.
APPENDIX A*
SENIOR LOAN OFFICER OPINION SURVEY OF BANK LENDING PRACTICES
Responses to the February Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices indicated a further decline in willingness to lend and a further tightening of non-price terms attached to business loans. The survey date, the 15th, came just as market interest rates had begun their most recent rise and it coincided with a one percentage point increase in the discount rate. The prime rate was somewhat below its mid-November level, and had been unchanged since early December. The shift in lending policies was not as marked as that indicated in the November survey, however, particularly among the largest banks (those with assets of $5 billion or more). Although seasonally adjusted business loan growth at large commercial banks has strengthened considerably since the fall, about one-quarter of the 119 respondents to the Survey reported an easing of business loan demand in mid-February compared to three months earlier, while only half this proportion reported a strengthening.1 In assessing prospects for business loan demand over the next three months, large banks anticipated some strengthening on balance while medium size banks (those having assets between $1/2 and $5 billion) expected some weakening. A small minority of banks (all of them medium size) reported that they had raised their standards of credit worthiness to qualify for the prime rate or for a given spread above prime relative to their standards three months earlier. At the time of the mid-November survey, well over one-third of respondents (including a high proportion of large banks) had reported tightening credit standards for the prime or spread over prime. Nonprice terms for established and local customers--which were reported to have been tightened on balance at the time of the previous survey--were little changed in the ensuing three months. For new and non-local customers, however, these conditions were tightened further on balance, although the proportion of banks reporting more stringency
* Prepared by Thomas F. Brady, Economist, Banking Section. 1. Although respondents are asked to allow for seasonal variation when reporting their perceptions of changes in loan demand, some may fail to make an adequate adjustment. Business loan demand at large banks is seasonally weak in February, while in November there is some seasonal increase.
A-1
A-2
was well below that of the previous survey. Compensating balance requirements were about unchanged on balance in the three months ending in mid-February. A large number of banks reported a lesser willingness to make fixed rate loans, particularly for terms exceeding a year. In their supplementary comments, several banks reported that they had moved to eliminate virtually all extensions of fixed rate term loans in the current interest rate environment. Forty percent of respondents reported a lesser willingness to make consumer installment loans, the same proportion as in the last survey. On balance, banks also continued to report reduced willingness to make most other types of loans, although the proportions so reporting were generally below those of November, particularly among large banks. Roughly one-third of respondents reported less willingness to make business loans with maturities in excess of 5 years and real estate loans. Smaller minorities reported lesser willingness to make shorter business loans, loans to finance companies, and loans to brokers and dealers. As in the previous survey, only a very small proportion of banks reported an increased willingness to extend most types of credit. However, a noticeable minority of respondents (most of them medium size) reported a greater willingness to participate in loans originated by correspondent banks.
A-3 TABLE
1
PAGE
1
SENIOR LOAN OFFICER OPINION SURVEYON BANK LENDING PRACTICES AT SELECTED LARGE BANKS IN THE U.S. MONTHS EARLIER) (STATUS OF POLICY ON FEBRUARY 15, 1980 COMPARED TO THREE (NUMBER OF BANKS & PEBCENT OF TOTAL BANKS ANSWERING QUESTION) L 0 AN
D E
MAN D
STRENGTH OF DEMAND FOR COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL LOANS (AFTER ALLOWANCE FOR BANKS USUAL SEASONAL VARIATION):
MUCH STRONGER
MODERATELY STRONGER
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED BANKS
PCT
MODERATELY EASIER
MUCH EASIER
TOTAL BANKS ANSWERING
PCT
BANKS
1.
COMPARED TO THREE MONTHS EARLIER
0
0.0
16
13.5
72
60.6
31
26.1
0
119
2.
ANTICIPATED DEMAND IN NEXT 3 MONTHS
0
0.0
23
19.4
68
57.2
28
23.6
0
119
BANKS
MUCH I
T ER E ST
RATE
P O LICY
STANDARDS OF CREDIT WORTHINESS: 3.
TO QUALIFY FOR PRIME
4.
TO QUALIFY FOR SPREAD ABOVE PRIME
RATE
FIRMER BANKS
PCT
6.
LONG-TERM (ONE YEAR
C
RE DIT AN D
(UNDER
ONE
8. 9. 10.
PCT
BANKS
PCT
MODERATELY EASIER BANKS
PCT
BANKS
MUCH EASIER BANKS
0.0
14
11.8
102
85.8-
3
2.6
0
0
0.0
19
16.0
96
80.7
4
3.4
0
BANKS
PCT
81
68.1
27
22.7
10
8.5
LONGER) OR
0
0.0
3
2.6
49
41.2
39
32.8
28
23.6
ESTABLISHED CUSTOMERS
MUCH FIRMER BANKS
PCT
MODEEATELY FIRMER BANKS
PCT
MODERATELY
BANKS
MUCH
BANKS
PCT
5.1
110
92.5
3
2.6
0
19.4
90
75.7
4
3.4
0
10
8.5
105
89.0
3
2.6
0
21
20.*
88
74.6
1
0.9
0
0.0
6
2
1.7
23
LOCAL SERVICE AREA CUSTOMERS
0
0.0
NONLOCAL SERVICE AREA CUSTOMERS
5
4.3
PCT
EASIER
PCT
0
NEWCUSTOMERS
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED
BANKS
MUCH LESS
0.9
T ER M S
PCT
MODERAATELY LESS
1
AVAILABILITY NON P R I C E
BANKS
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED
0.0
BANKS
PCT
MODERATELY GREATER
0
REVIEWING CREDIT LINES OR LOAN APPLICATIONS FOR: 7.
BANKS
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED
PCT
YEAR)
WILLINGESS TO MAKE FIXED RATE LOANS: SHORT-TERM
MODERATELY FIMER
BANKS
0
CONSIDERABLY GREATER
5.
PCT
BNKS
PCT
BANKS
COMPENSATING BALANCE REQUIREMENTS FOR: 11.
COMMERCIAL & INDUSTRIAL LOANS
0
12.
LOANS TO FINANCE COMPANIES
0 CONSIDERABLY GREATER
WILLINGNBSS 13.
TO
MAKE OTHER TYPES OF LOANS:
SECURED CONSTRUCTION & LIAD DVLPMNT
BANKS 0
PCT 0.0
MODERATELY GREATER BANKS 3
PCT 2.6
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED BANKS 72
PCT 60.6
SBCURED REAL ESTATE LOANS: 14.
1-4 FAMILY RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES
61.9
15.
MULTI-FAMILY RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY
60.0
16.
COMMERCIAL & INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY
69.0
17.
INSTALLMENT LOANS TO INDIVIDUALS
58.0
COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL LOANS OF: 18.
1-5 YEARS MATURITY
84.1
19.
OVER 5 YEARS MATURITY
69.8
20.
LOANS TO FINANCE COMPANIES
88.3
21.
LOANS TO SECURITIES BROKERS & DEALERS
22. PARTICIPATION LOANS WITH CORRESPONDENT BANKS
86.5 79.9
MUCH
MODERATELYO LESS BANKS 40
PCT 33.7
LESS BANKS 4
PCT 3.4
TABLE 2
PAGE 1
COMPARISON OF QUARTERLY CHANGES IN BANK LENDING PRACTICES AT BANKS GROUPED BY SIZE OF TOTAL DOMESTIC ASSETS (STATUS OF POLICY ON FEBRUARY 15, 1980 COMPARED TO THREE MONTHS EARLIER) (NUMBER OF BANKS ANSWERING EACH QUESTION IS PERCENT OF TOTAL NUMBER OF BANKS ANSWERING QUESTION) SIZE OF BANK -L O AN
MUCH STRONGER
D E M AND
STRENGTH OF DEMAND FOR COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL LOANS (AFTER ALLOWANCE FOR BANKS USUAL SEASONAL VARIATION:
$5 S OVER
MODERATELY STRONGER
UNDER $5
TOTAL DOMESTIC ASSETS II
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED
$5 OVER
UNDER $5
$5 & OVER
UNDER $5
BILLIONS 1/
$5
UNDER
& OVER
$5
TOTAL
MUCH NEAKER
MODERATELY WEAKER
S5 OVER
UNDER S5
UNDER
$5 S OTE..
S5
1.
COMPARED TO THREE MONTHS EARLIER
0
0
12
14
62
60
25
26
0
0
100
100
2.
ANTICIPATED DEMAND IN NEXT 3 MONTHS
0
0
25
18
62
56
12
26
0
0
100
100
MUCH FIRMER INTE
EST
RATE
MODERATELY FIRMER
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED
MUCH EASIER
MODERATELY EASIER
TOTAL
P OL ICY 15 & OVER
STANDARDS OF CREDIT WORTHIESS:
UNDER $5
$5 & OVER
$5 UNDER & OVER $5
UNDER $5
$5 & OVER
UNDER $5
s5 & OVER
UNDER $5
$5
UNDER IS
9 OVER
3.
TO QUALIFT FOR PRIME RATE
0
0
0
15
96
83
4
2
0
0
100
100
4.
TO QUALIFY FOR SPREAD ABOVE PRIME
0
0
0
20
96
77
4
3
0
0
100
100
CONSIDERABLY GREATER
WILLINGNESS
TO MAKE FIXED
5.
SHORT-TERM
6.
LONG-TERM
CREDIT A ND
$5 OVER
RATE LOANS:
(UNDER ONE YEAR) (ONE
YEAR OR LONGER)
AVAILABILITY NONPRACTICE
UUDER $5
$5 & OVER
UNDER $5
$5 & OVER
UNDER $5
MODERATELY LESS $5 & OVER
CONSIDERABLT LESS
UNDER $5
0
0
0
1
83
64
8
26
0
0
0
3
50
39
33
33
MUCH
$5 &OVER
E SSENTI A LL Y
MODERATELY FIRMER
TERM S
REVIEWING CREDIT LINES OR LOAN APPLICATIONS FOR:
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED
MODERATELY GREATER
UNDER $5 $5 & OVER
UNCHANGED
UNDER $5
$5 & OVER
UNDER $5
25 6 OVER 08 17
MODERATELY EASIER $5 & OVER
UNDER $5
IIDUR $5
25
TOTAL UNDER 15 S OVERT $5 100
100
100
100 L
MU80CH EASIER OIDER
15
* OVER
(5
I5
ESTABLISHED CUSTOMERS
0
0
0
6
92
93
8
1
0
0
8.
NEW CUSTOMERS
0
2
12
21
83
74
4
3
0
0
100
9.
LOCAL SERVICE AREA CUSTOMERS
0
0
*
9
91
88
4
2
0
0
100
NONLOCAL SERVICE AREA CUSTOMERS
0
5
13
22
83
73
4
0
0
0
100
7.
10.
100
COMPENSATING BALANCE REQUIREMENTS FOR: 11.
COMMERCIAL & INDUSTRIAL LOANS
0
12
100
12.
LOANS TO FIINANCE COMPANIES
0
12
100
CONSIDERABLY GREATER
WILLINGNESS TO OF LOANS: 13.
$5 & OVER
MAKEOTHER TYPES
SECURED CONSTRUCTION & LAND DVLPMNT
0
UNDER $5
MODERATELY GREATER $5 & OVER
UNDER $5
ESSENTIALLY UNCHANGED $5 & OVER 79
UNDER $5 56
MODERATELY LESS $5 & OVER
17
UNDER $5
38
COPBTERANLT LESS
5
mER
£ OVER
$5
TOTAL $5 * OVER
4
3
100
gNSE S5 100
SECURED REAL ESTATE LOANS: 14.
1-4 FAMILY RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES
0
15.
MULTI-FAMILY
0
16.
COMMERCIAL & INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY
17.
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY
INSTALLMENT LOANS TO INDIVIDUALS
COHBERCIAL AND
INDUSTRIAL LOANS
0 0
OF:
18.
1-5 YEARS MATURITY
0
0
1
19.
OVER 5 YEARS MATURITY
0
N
8
0
4
4
0
*
2
0
0
2
20.
LOANS TO FINANCE COMPANIES
21.
LOANS
22.
PARTICIPATION LOANS WITH CORRESPONDENT BANKS
TO SECURITIES BROKERS
&
DEALERS
1/ AS OF SEPT. 30, 1978 , THERE WERE 21 BANKS HAVING DOMESTIC ASSETS OF $5 BILLIONOR MORE. THEIR COMBINED DOMESTIC ASSETS, IN BILLIONS, TOTALLED $325. COMPARED TO $511 FOR THEENTIRE PANEL OF REPORTING BANKS AND $1198 FOR ALL INSURED COMMERCIAL BANKS.
Cite this document
Federal Reserve (1980, March 17). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19800318_part3
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_19800318_part3,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {1980},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19800318_part3},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}