greenbooks · July 17, 1972
Greenbook/Tealbook
Prefatory Note
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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
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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
July 14,
By the Staff
Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System
1972
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES
The Domestic Economy
Industrial production.
Industrial production has been revised
back to January 1970 and the new index levels are a little higher
than the unrevised ones, especially since late 1971.
In May the re-
vised level is 0.7 per cent above the unrevised level.
Industrial production rose 0.3 per cent further in June,
following an increase of 0.3 per cent in May, instead of 0.5 per cent
as reported earlier.
The level in June was 112.7 per cent (1967=100),
4.9 per cent above a year earlier and 0.7 per cent above the 1969 high
of 111.9.
The total index on the revised basis first surpassed the old
1969 peak in April when the index was 112.1 per cent.
The June output gains were in business equipment, which rose
0.5 per cent further, and in materials, as most consumer goods changed
little.
There were, however, some declines in both consumer durable
and nondurable goods.
Auto assemblies declined about 3 per cent and
were at an annual rate of 8.5 million units compared to 8.8 million
units in May.
Among materials, production of nonferrous metals, construction
products, and the textile, paper, and chemical group rose.
steel, however, changed little.
Output of
(Confidential until release July 17.)
- 2INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
(1967=100, seasonally adjusted)
1971
May
April
1972
pMay
eJune
Per cent change
May to June
Total index
107.4
112.1
112.4
112.7
.3
Consumer goods
115.4
121.4
121.8
121.4
-. 3
95.1
101.2
101.0
101.5
.5
78.2
76.6
76.4
76.5
.1
109.4
112.8
114.4
105.5
114.8
107.3
115.6
107.6
.7
.3
Autos*
8.6
9.0
8.8
8.5
* Seasonally adjusted annual rate, millions of cars.
-2.1
Business
equipment
Defense
equipment
Materials
Steel
Note:
The index has been revised back to January 1970. The revision
has raised the level of the total index and the May 1972 index
was revised up by .7 per cent.
(Confidential until release, Monday p.m.,
Auto sales.
July 17.)
Sales of new domestic-type autos in the first
10 days of July were at an annual rate of 8.5 million units, up 21
per cent from a year earlier but below the month of June sales rate
of 9.0 million.
However, sales in early July were affected by the
fact that Ford completed several sales incentive contests at the end
of last month.
-3-
New home sales.
Sales of new single-family homes by
merchant builders rose 3 per cent in May to a seasonally adjusted
annual rate of 711 thousands units--somewhat above the record first
quarter rate.
Although the number of unsold homes rose to another
new high, it continued to represent less than a 6-month supply.
The
median price of new homes sold was virtually unchanged in May.
NEW SINGLE-FAMILY HOMES SOLD AND FOR SALE
Homes
Homes
for sale 2/
sold 1/
(Thousands of units)
Median price of:
Homes for sale
Homes sold
(Thousands of dollars)
1971
QIII
666
265
25.3
26.1
QIV
682
284
25.5
25.9
QI
698
317
26.2
26.1
March (r)
April (r)
May (p)
644
689
711
317
320
333
27.4
26.8
26.7
26.1
26.4
26.4
1972
1/ SAAR.
2/
SA, end of period.
-4
-
The Domestic Financial Situation
Home mortgage rates.
The average return on home mortgages
remained virtually unchanged in June, according to the FHA.
In the
primary market, the average contract rate on conventional new home
loans remained at 7.60 per cent for the third consecutive month.
In the secondary market, the average yield on FHA-insured new home
loans edged up 1 basis point to 7.54 per cent.
(Confidential until
July 18.)
AVERAGE RATES AND YIELDS ON NEW-HOME MORTGAGES
Primary market:
Conventional loans
Spread
(basis
Level
points)
(per cent)
Secondary market:
FHA-insured loans
Spread
Discounts
(basis
Level
(points)
points)
(per cent)
1971 - Low
High
7.55
7.95
-36
71
7.32
7.97
-36
56e
2.5e
7.8
1972 - Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
7.60
7.60
7.55
53
44
33
7.49
7.46
7.45
42
30
23
4.0
3.8
3.7
NOTE:
19
4.1
7.60
29
7.50
Apr.
4.3
32
7.53
39
May
7.60
June
7.60
30
7.54
24
4.4
FHA series: interest rates on conventional first mortgages
(excluding additional initial fees and charges) are rounded by
FHA to the nearest 5 basis points. On FHA loans carrying the
7 per cent ceiling rate in effect since mid-February 1971, a
change of 1.0 points in discount is associated with a change
of 12 to 14 basis points in yield. Gross yield spread is
average mortgage return, before deducting servicing costs, minus
average yield on new issues of high-grade corporate bonds with
5-year call protection.
e/
Estimated.
-5INTEREST RATES
1972
Highs
Lows
June 19
July 13
4.62 (7/12)
3.18 (3/1)
4.46 (6/14)
4.62 (7/12)
2.99 (2/11)
3.92
4.50
4.50
4.81
4.04
4.88
4.85 (7/12)
4.94 (7/12)
Short-Term Rates
Federal funds (wkly. avg.)
3-month
4.14 (7/3)
Comm. paper (90-119 day) 4.88 (7/13)
Bankers' acceptances
4.75 (7/13)
Euro-dollars
5.94 (3/27)
Treasury bills (bid)
3.75 (2/29)
3.38 (2/23)
4.62 (3/8)
4.75
5.50
CD's (prime NYC)
Most often quoted new
4.85 (7/12)
4.94 (7/12)
3.50 <2/23)
3.50 (2/16)
4.50 (6/14)
4.68 (7/3)
4.88 (7/13)
5.05 (7/5)
3.35 (1/10)
3.83 (3/3)
3.7 (2/17)
4.35
4.62
4.80
4.54
5.00 (7/12)
5.30 (7/5)
3.88 (2/23)
3.70 (2/2)
4.62 (6/14)
4.95 (6/14)
5.00 (7/12)
5.12 (7/12)
5.09 (6/30)
5.38 (7/10)
3.57 (1/8)
4.32 (1/17)
4.62
5.07
4.90
5.34
5.38 (7/12)
3.15 (4/13)
4.62 (1/19)
5.12 (6/14)
3.00 (6/14)
5.38 (7/12)
Treasury coupon issues
5-years
20-years
6.28 (4/13)
6.22 (4/14)
5.47 (1/13)
5.95 (1/14)
5.88
6.00
6.01
Corporate
Seasoned Aaa
Baa
7.37 (4/24)
8.29 (1/3)
7.14 (1/17)
8.17 (1/19)
7.23
8.19
7.19
8.21
7.42 (4/14)
6.86 (1/14)
7.26 (6/16)
7.34
Municipal
Bond Buyer Index
Moody's Aaa
5.54 <4/13)
5.25 (7/13)
4.99 (1/13)
4.65 (1/13)
5.36 (6/14)
5.10 (6/15)
5.44
5.25
Mortgage--implicit yield
in FNMA auction 1/
7.63 (5/15)
7.54 (3/20)
7.62 (6/12)
7.62 (7/10)
Secondary market
6-month
Treasury bills (bid)
Comm. paper (4-6 mo.)
Federal agencies
CD's (prime NYC)
Most often quoted new
Secondary market
4.60 (6/14)
4.88
5.00
1-year
Treasury bills (bid)
Federal agencies
CD's (prime NYC)
Most often quoted new
Prime municipals
2.35 (1/12)
3.05 (7/12)
Intermediate and Long-Term
New Issue Aaa
---
1/
5.96
Yield on short-term forward commitment ofter Pllowance for commitment fee
and required purchase and holding of FNMK, stock. Assu nes discount on 30-year
loan aaortized over 15 years.
-
6-
International Developments
Foreign exchange markets.
The dollar was heavily sold on
major European exchange markets on July 13 and 14.
Available figures
indicate that in these two days major central banks purchased a total
of $2.6 billion.
About 3/4 of this intervention was done by Germany
($1.3 billion) and Switzerland ($0.7 billion).
This brings the net
total of central bank intervention from June 15 through July 14 to
roughly $5.8 billion.
The current pressure on the dollar has been
generally attributed to speculation on a joint EC float against the
dollar.
The EC finance ministers meet on July 17 to discuss a
European position on monetary reform, and the market, despite official
denials, is apprehensive that the ministers may decide on a joint
float by the EC at that time.
On both July 13 and 14 Euro-dollar rates rose moderately,
though perhaps by less than might be expected from demands created
by the exchange market situation.
Actions by central banks.
The Bundesbank announced on
July 13 that reserve requirements on the domestic liabilities of
commercial banks would be raised by 10 per cent effective August 1.
A 20 per cent increase which took effect July 1 had already boosted
reserve requirements to levels high by historical standards.
The
Bundesbank estimates that the new 10 per cent rise will absorb DM
3.5 to 4 billion in liquidity.
- 7Pursuing its
efforts to slow capital inflows, the Bundesbank
announced on July 12 that it
had asked the commercial banks not to
sell to non-residents portfolios claims against residents and DMdenominated claims on non-residents, nor interests in mutual funds
and real estate funds.
At the end of June, the sale to non-residents
of both new and existing bonds issued by residents was prohibited
without permission of the Bundesbank.
New issues of bonds floated
by non-residents may still be sold to non-residents.
The Bundesbank also requested the commercial banks not to
help arrange loans of less than DM500,000 from foreign sources to
German nonbank enterprises.
Under the Bardepot law, 50 per cent of
the proceeds from loans of more than DM500,000 from non-residents to
nonbanks must be deposited, interest free, with the Bundesbank.
The Bank of France on July 13 raised all reserve requirements
of commercial banks by 2 percentage points as part of its effort to
soak up liquidity created by speculative capital inflows in the last
several weeks.
CORRECTIONS:
Page III-4 - Paragraph 2, line 9, the period should
be June 28 to July 12.
Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (1972, July 17). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19720718_part1
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_19720718_part1,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {1972},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19720718_part1},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}