greenbooks · August 30, 1965
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
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1
In some cases, original copies needed to be photocopied before being scanned into electronic
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tilting) and lightly cleaned (to remove dark spots caused by staple holes, hole punches, and other
blemishes caused after initial printing).
2
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Content last modified 6/05/2009.
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES
The Domestic Economy
Sales of new domestic automobiles in the first 20 days indicate that the August rate will be around 8.8 million vehicles, about
the same as the June and July rates and well above the 8.2 million
rate in April and May.
Deliveries this month are expected to be about
6 per cent above a year ago.
Dealer inventories of August 20 were down 11 per cent from
the end of July, a less than seasonal decline, and were a third higher
than a year ago.
The consumer price index rose .1 per cent in July to 110.2 per
cent of the 1957-59 average; increases of 3.3 per cent for meats and
10 per cent for potatoes were largely responsible for the advance.
Had excise taxes not been reduced, the index would have risen
an additional .2 per cent according to the BLS.
The tax reductions
especially affected household appliances which fell by 1.4 per cent.
Medical care costs advanced sharply by .4 per cent, while
prices of new cars and apparel declined slightly.
The Domestic Financial Situation
Yields on new offerings of corporate bonds have continued to
move upward this week; the new issue series (Aaa basis) rose 4 basis
points to 4.71 per cent.
At this level, underwriters have been able to
distribute these issues quickly.
In free market trading at week's end,
the one competitively-bid issue was selling at a 3 basis point premium
from offering price.
A $30 million debenture issue of General Telephone Co. of
California, originally scheduled for this week, was postponed indefinitely.
Company officials ascribed the action to "prevailing market
conditions and the number of current offerings of utilities debt
securities."
In the municipal market, yields on seasoned, high-grade
issues advanced 2 to 3 basis points.
Common stock prices--as measured by Standard & Poor's Index
of 500 stocks--have risen 0.5 per cent this week in heavy trading.
At the close on August 26, the index, at 87.14, was only 3-1/2 per cent
below its May 13 high.
Trading volume this week has averaged 5.4 mil-
lion shares daily with activity on the last two days exceeding 6.0 million.
In July, savings capital at savings and loan associations
declined by $435 million.
As the accompanying table shows, July is
usually a month of heavy withdrawals, but new savings have usually been
sufficient to offset them.
The substantial net outflow can be attributed to the slowdown
in growth of new savings this year.
Between June and July, new savings
increased about 2 per cent, compared to increases of 9.6, 20.5, and
12.5 per cent in 1964, 1963, and 1962 respectively.
Withdrawals actu-
ally increased less this year between June and July than in the other
years of the expansion period--90 per cent vs. 105, 147, 113, and 105
per cent in 1964 through 1961 respectively.
SAVINGS FLOWS AT ALL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATIONS
(Millions of dollars)
July
June
Net inflow
New savings
Withdrawals
Net inflow
New savings
Withdrawals
1965
1964
1963
1602
1765
1631
3945
3762
3243
2343
1999
1601
-435
16
-11
4011
4125
3909
4446
4087
3995
1962
1395
3027
1598
25
3405
3397
124
2974
2866
1961
1356
2758
1395
International developments
More complete, though still preliminary, data now indicate an
unadjusted U.S. payments deficit on regular transactions in July of
$265 million.
earlier.
This figure is $65 million higher than was
indicated
After rough allowance for seasonal factors, the payments posi-
tion was probably one of modest deficit, following the moderate surplus
of the second quarter.
U.S. imports in July dropped by 9 per cent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $20 billion.
However, about one-third of the
decline resulted from a change in statistical compiling procedures, and
a large part of the remaining fall is thought to have resulted from the
holding up of import arrivals by the seamen's strike on American ships.
A substantial further decline in bank-reported claims on
foreigners occurred in July.
According to preliminary data, the decrease
for long- and short-term claims together totaled $182 million.
Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (1965, August 30). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19650831_part3
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_19650831_part3,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {1965},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19650831_part3},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}