greenbooks · October 6, 1969
Greenbook/Tealbook
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of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. This electronic document was created
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Content last modified 6/05/2009.
CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
SUPPLEMENT
CURRENT ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CONDITIONS
Prepared for the
Federal Open Market Committee
By the Staff
Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System
October 3, 1969
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES
The Domestic Nonfinancial Economy
Labor market.
Unemployment rose sharply in September and
nonfarm employment showed relatively little growth for the third
month in a row (confidential until noon Monday, October 6).
The un-
employment rate rose by half a point to 4.0 per cent, the largest
monthly increase since 1960.
There were increases in unemployment in
each of the major age-sex groups--including adult men (aged 25 and
over)--but over half the increase occurred among 16 to 24 year olds.
The increase in joblessness was a significant sign of easing but its
size should be regarded with special caution for several reasons.
First, the August rate--3.5 per cent--was probably held down
by the early model changeover in the auto industry, which also inflated
the employment and income figures.
Second, September is a transition
month when labor force flows are intensified by the opening of schools.
This year the survey week was relatively early and some students-especially those in college--may have still been in the job market.
Thus, some of the increase may be washed out in October when all of the
schools are open.
Finally the size of the September increase does not
appear to be fully consistent with other measures of employment demand
and unemployment change.
Historically, that large an increase has re-
flected substantial net layoffs.
In fact, employment levels were up
slightly in September and the increase in insured unemployment claims
was moderate.
- 2 -
Nevertheless, some of the increase in unemployment is supported
by other data.
Employment has moved down this summer in construction as
well as in some supplier industries.
Similarly, defense contractors
have cut back employment somewhat and government employment (both
Federal and State and local) has tapered off since June.
Weakening in
these sectors also occurred when labor demand appeared to be easing in
other industries.
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
(Seasonally adjusted)
1968
September
Total
1969
August
September
3.6
3.5
4.0
Men aged:
16-19 years
20-24 years
25 years and over
10.9
5.2
1.8
11.1
4.5
1.7
12.1
6.3
1.9
Women aged:
16-19 years
20-24 years
25 years and over
14.4
6.8
3.1
14.1
6.4
3.3
14.6
7.1
3.5
Nonfarm employment.
change in September.
Nonfarm payroll employment showed no
But after adjustment for strike effects and impact
of the early model changeover in the auto industry an advance of about
70,000 was indicated.
Employment increases continued in the capital-
goods group, primary metals and services.
Little change occurred in
the consumer-goods and trade sectors, while employment continued to
decline in construction and the Federal government.
- 3 -
The manufacturing workweek edged back up to 40.7 hours in September,
but was down 0.3 hour
from a year earlier.
Since June, nonfarm employment growth has averaged only
33,000 monthly, compared to advances of 278,000 monthly early in the
year.
The slowing of growth has occurred in all sectors except the
capital-goods group and primary metals.
construction and Federal employment.
Declines have continued in
State and local government
employment has tapered off, at least temporarily, while trade and the
consumer-goods industries have held employment levels about steady.
NONFARM PAYROLL EMPLOYMENT
(In Thousands, Seasonally Adjusted)
DecemberMarch
Total
(Average Monthly Change)
MarchJuneJune
September
278
197
33
Government
Private industry
33
245
42
154
-31
64
Construction
Manufacturing
All others
15
55
175
31
25
98
-25
31
58
Unit auto sales.
Sales of new domestic autos, after allowance
for the earlier introduction date of the 1970 models, rose in September
to an annual rate of about 9 million units, 12 per cent above the reduced
July-August rate and the same as a year earlier.
Sales in the final
selling period of September increased to a new high, about 20 per cent
above the usual strong sales that typically follow the introduction of
new models.
-4-
Construction activity.
Outlays for new construction, which
were revised upward somewhat for August, changed little in September,
at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $91.1 billion.
This was still
very near the peak reached in early 1969 and as much as 6 per cent
above a year earlier, although all of the year-to-year increase reflected higher costs.
Within the private sector, current dollar outlays for
residential structures continued downward in September and were more
than a tenth below the peak of last February.
But outlays for in-
dustrial, commercial and other private nonresidential construction
apparently changed little from their overall peak in July.
NEW CONSTRUCTION PUT IN PLACE
(Confidential FRB)
September 1969
($ billion) 1/
Total
Per cent change from
August 1969
September 1968
91.0
--
Private
Residential
Nonresidential
61.0
28.6
32.4
-- 1
--
+ 6
- 2
+ 15
Public
Federal
State & local
30.0
3.5
26.5
+ 1
+ 3
+ 1
+
+
+
+
6
5
2
8
1/ Seasonally adjusted annual rates; preliminary. Data for the most
recent month (September) are confidential Census Bureau extrapolations.
In no case should public reference be made to them.
-5Expenditures for public construction rose somewhat further
in September, with outlays for State and local projects--by far the
major category--holding at an extremely advanced rate.
Indications
are for some reduction in public outlays over the period ahead,
however, based on recently announced Administration plans for a
substantial cutback in contracts for Federally-owned projects during
the remainder of this fiscal year and accompanying requests for
curtailment by State and local governments to help relieve inflationary
pressures within the construction industry as a whole.
Difficulties
encountered in the market for municipal bonds this year also point to
some slowing.
The Domestic Financial Situation
Nonbank depositary intermediaries.
Preliminary data for the
first three days of the current reinvestment period indicate that the
15 largest New York City Mutual Savings Banks had substantial net
outflows.
After rough adjustment for seasonal factors, these outflows
were probably larger than those in June 1969.
Data for the grace
period for savings and loans should be available in time
FOMC meeting.
for the
-63 GRACE DAYS COMBINED
15 LARGEST NEW YORK CITY MUTUAL SAVINGS BANKS
Net
($ millions)
Adjusted*
($ millions)
As a Per Cent
Deposits
June
1969
-316.1
-166.3
-.81
1966
1967
1968
-170.7
-153.5
-166.6
- 73.2
- 58.2
- 61.7
-. 47
n.a.
-. 34
1969
-271.3
-134.9
-.72
September
* Adjusted for repayment of passbook loans made earlier to save
interest.
Corrections
Section III - page 25, fourth line from bottom "6 per cent
ceiling imposed by Congress" should read "6 per cent ceiling imposed
by most States on such debt issues."
KEY INTEREST RATES
1969
Lows
Highs
Sept. 8
Oct. 2
9.57 (9/3)
9.11 (10/1)
Short-Term Rates
Federal funds (weekly average)
3-months
Treasury bills (bid)
Bakers' acceptances
Euro-dollars
Federal agencies
Finance paper
CD's (prime NYC)
Highest quoted new issue
Secondary market
6-months
Treasury bills (bid)
Bankers' acceptances
Commercial paper
Federal agencies
CD's (prime NYC)
Highest quoted new issue
Secondary market
5.95 (1/1)
9.61 (9/24)
(10/1)
5.87
6.38
7.06
6.03
6.13
(4/30) 7.17
8.50
(2/17)
(1/22) 12.50
7.86
(3/28)
(3/11) 8.25
6.00
6.00
6.40 (1/30)
8.70 (7/23)
5.96
6.50
6.25
6.32
7.39 (9/9)
(4/30)
(2/17)
(1/6)
(1/17)
7.09
8.13 (9/3)
(7/9)
(6/10) 11.20 (9/3)
(10/2)
7.54 (9/3)
7.63
(7/30)
8.72 (7/9)
8.88
8.11 (7/30)
7.08
8.25
11.05 (10/1)
7.86
7.88
6.00
8.25 (9/3)
5.00
8.60
7.37
8.25 (9/3)
8.25 (9/3)
7.96 (9/3
7.30
8.37
8.88
7.87
6.25
6.50 (1/30)
6.25
9.00 (7/23)
6.25
8.30 (9/3)
6.25
8.85
5.86 (1/16)
3.90 (1/3)
7.47 (7/1)
5.85 (9/17)
7.41
5.75
7.40
5.75
6.11 (1/20)
3.06 (10/1)
5.91 (4/14)
6.84 (9/30)
7.39
6.48
7.98
6.77
6.56 (1/2)
7.26 (2/3)
7.18 (9/24)
8.08 (9/17)
7.04 (9/3)
7.94 (9/3)
7.27
8.17
7.03 (1/23)
6.90 (2/20)
7.80 (6/18)
8.22 (10/1)
7.90 (9/3)
8.22
Municipal
Bond Buyer Index
Moody's Aaa
4.82 (1/23)
4.57 (1/2)
6.37 (9/3)
5.85 (9/17)
6.37 (9/3)
5.80 (9/3)
5.83
Mortgage--implicit yield
in FNMA weekly auction 1/
7.66 (1/6)
8.48 (9/29)
8.36
8.48 (9/29)
1-year
Treasury bills (bid)
Prime municipals
Intermediate and Long-Term
Treasury coupon issues
5-years
20-years
Corporate
Seasoned Aaa
Baa
New Issue Aaa
No Call Protection
Call Protection
1/
6.19
Yield on 6-month forward commitment after allowance for commitment fee and
required purchase and holding of FNMA stock. Asumes discount on 30-year
loan amortized over 15 years.
Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (1969, October 6). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19691007_part1
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_19691007_part1,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {1969},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19691007_part1},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}