greenbooks · April 18, 1977
Greenbook/Tealbook
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Content last modified 6/05/2009.
April
CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
CLASS II - 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
15, 1977
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY
Industrial production........................................
Retail trade inventories....................................
1
2
TABLES:
Industrial production...........................
..
....
Business inventories........................................
Inventory ratios ............................... . ..... ...
THE DOMESTIC FINANCIAL ECONOMY
TABLE:
Interest rates ................................
......
APPENDIX
Bank credit revision...........................
A-i
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES
The Domestic Nonfinancial Economy
Industrial production in March increased by an estimated
1.4 per cent to 135.1 per cent of the 1967 average, following the
1.0 per cent gain in February.
In March, gains in output were wide-
spread among consumer goods, business equipment, construction supplies,
and materials; but production by utilities declined appreciably.
About one-third of the advance in total output reflected a steppedup pace of motor vehicle production.
March output of factories,
mines, and utilities was 20.9 per cent above the recession low two
years earlier and about 2.5 per cent above the prerecession high in
June 1974.
Output of durable consumer goods increased 5.7 per cent in
March, with auto assemblies up 21 per cent to an annual rate of 9.9
million units.
Announced schedules for auto assemblies indicate an
annual rate for April of 9.4 million units.
consumer goods rose slightly.
Output of nondurable
Production of business equipment
increased 1.5 per cent.
Output of materials in March rose by 1.1 per cent.
Produc-
tion gains were widespread in both durable goods and nondurable goods
materials.
Among durable goods materials, output of iron and steel
rose sharply; among nondurable goods materials, large gains occurred
for textiles and paper.
- 2-
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
(Seasonally Adjusted)
1976
Dec.
Indexes, 1967=100
Jan.
Per cent changes
Month Year QIV to
1977
Feb.
Mar.
(p)
(e)
ago
ago
Q1
Total
133.1
132.0
133.3
135.1
1.4
5.5
1.3
Products, total
133.8
133.0
133.7
135.7
1.5
5.9
1.8
Final products
Consumer goods
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Business equipment
132.1
142.0
151.2
138.4
143.2
130.8
140.1
145.1
138.1
142.0
131.5
140.9
145.5
139.0
142.9
133.7
143.4
153.8
139.2
145.1
1.7
1.8
5.7
.1
1.5
5.8
5.4
9.5
3.6
8.3
1.7
1.6
2.3
1.2
2.5
Intermediate products
Construction supplies
139.8
135.5
141.3
135.4
141.9
135.6
142.8
137.2
.6
1.2
5.9
6.6
2.2
.7
131.9
130.5
132.5
134.0
1.1
4.5
.4
Materials
p--preliminary
e--estimated
Book value of retail trade inventories increased at a $3.1
billion annual rate in February, following the very rapid $14.5 billion
January rise. Stocks of durable goods were down slightly in February
as auto dealers' inventories fell at a $1.7 billion annual rate;
excluding auto, however, durable inventories were up $1.5 billion
annual rate--still well below the $5.1 billion January gain.
Nondur-
able goods stores increased inventories at a $3.4 billion annual rate-off from the $6.0 billion January rate of rise.
The ratio of inventories
to sales at retail stores declined from 1.48 to 1.44 in February.
- 3-
Book value of total manufacturing and trade inventories rose
at a $22.1 billion annual rate in February, following a $34.2 billion
January increase.
The January-February average increase of $28.1
billion, annual rate, is far above the $10.3 billion fourth quarter
rise.
The ratio of inventories to sales at all manufacturing and trade
firms dropped to 1.46 from 1.49 in January.
BUSINESS INVENTORIES
(Change at annual rates in seasonally
adjusted book values; billions of dollars)
Manufacturing and trade
Manufacturing
Durable
Nondurable
1977
1976
QIV
Jan.
Feb.
10.3
6.5
6.5
.0
34.2
10.7
10.0
.7
22.1
12.4
9.0
3.4
3.9
1.6
2.2
1.3
23.4
8.9
14.5
3.4
9.7
6.6
3.1
-1.7
Trade, total
Wholesale
Retail
Auto
INVENTORY RATIOS
Inventory to sales:
Manufacturing and trade
Manufacturing
Durable
Nondurable
Trade, total
Wholesale
Retails
Inventories to unfilled orders:
Durable manufacturing
1976
QIV
1977
Feb.
Jan.
1.51
1.65
2.04
1.24
1.49
1.62
2.00
1.21
1.46
1.58
1.96
1.18
1.36
1.22
1.47
1.37
1.21
1.48
1.34
1.20
1,44
.632
.631
.633
- 4-
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 5.
-5INTEREST RATES
(One day quotes--in per cent)
1977
Highs
1977
Lows
Mar.
14
Apr.
14
Short-Term Rates
Federal funds (wkly. avg.)
3-month
Treasury bills (bid)
Comm. paper (90-119 days)
Bankers' acceptances
Euro-dollars
CD's (NYC) 90 days
Most often quoted new
6-month
Treasury bills (bid)
Comm. paper (4-6 mos.)
CD's (NYC) 180 days
Most often quoted new
1-year
Treasury bills (bid)
CD's (NYC)
Most often quoted new
Prime municipals
4.77(3/23)
4.47(1/5)
4.62(3/16)
4.65(4/13)
4.77(1/27)
4.88(2/3)
4.93(2/3)
5.31(3/29)
4.39(1/3)
4.63(1/10)
4.66(1/3)
4.88(1/5)
4.57
4.75
4.80
5.13
4.52
4.75
4.75
5.13
4.80(2/2)
4.50(1/5)
4.77(3/9)
4.70(4/13)
5.06(1/27)
4.83(4/14)
4.54(1/3)
4.63(1/7)
4.83
4.88
4.70
4.88
5.05(2/2)
4.65(1/5)
5.00(3/9)
5.00(4/13)
5.32(2/2)
4.66(1/3)
5.13
4.94
5.25(4/13)
3.00(1/21)
5.00(1/5)
2.65(1/7)
5.25(3/9)
2.90(3/11)
5.25(4/13)
2.90(4/15)
6.66(2/2)
7.27(2/2)
7.78(3/8)
5.73(1/3)
6.50(1/3)
7.20(1/3)
6.44
7.17
7.74
6.03
6.93
7.58
8.13(3/14)
9.13(2/25)
3.30(3/9)
8.32(3/9)
7.87(1/5)
9.04(1/6)
7.90(1/5)
7.95(1/5)
3.13
9.14
8.30(3/11)
8.32(3/11)
8.06(4/13)
9.10(4/13)
8.23p(4/15)
5.93(2/2)
5.70(4/13)
5.92(3/10)
5.70
8.72(4/6)
8.46(1/12)
8.66(3/7)
8.72(4/4)
Intermediate- and Long-Term
Treasury (constant maturity)
3-year
7-year
20-year
Corporate
Seasoned Aaa
Baa
New Issue
Utility
Aaa
Recently Offered
Municipal
Bond Buyer Index
Mortgage--average yield in
FNMA auction
8.16p(4/15)
A -
1
APPENDIX A*
BANK CREDIT REVISION
The commercial bank credit figures used in this month's analysis
of financial developments reflect revisions based on the June 30, 1976,
Call Report. This Appendix explains the effects of the revisions on
previous estimates of loans and investments.
According to the June Call Report data, growth in commercial
bank credit was considerably larger over the first half of 1976 than
the partially estimated data had indicated. The seasonally adjusted
annual rate of growth in total loans and investments for this period is
now estimated at 7.7 per cent compared with the previous estimate of
4.9 per cent as shown on Table I. The new higher level for total bank
credit reflects mainly upward revisions in the level of total loans, as
shown in Table II. Holdings of U.S. Treasury and other securities were
increased only moderately.
The level of the total bank credit series was raised by $10 billion
for June 30, 1976, and the level of the total loans series by $8.6 billion-both larger dollar revisions than had occurred in any previous benchmark
adjustment. The levels of U.S. Treasury securities and other securities
were raised by $0.6 billion and $0.7 billion respectively, both close to
the average amounts of revisions in previous years.
There were three sources of error involved in the original
monthly estimates.
(a) Initial estimates for both loans and securities at nonmember banks were too lo.- The June Call Report indicated that credit
expansion at nonmember banks in the first half of 1976 had been $6.3
billion more than previously estimated. This revision, which accounted
for almost two-thirds of the total revision for all banks, also raised
nonmember estimates for earlier months back to January 1976. The new
Call Report ratios have been carried forward raising monthly estimates
of nonmember bank credit subsequent to June 1976. Most of the revisions
in nonmember bank credit reflected stronger loan growth. As of June 30,
1976, nonmember bank loans were $5.6 billion higher than initially
1/
*
Initial estimates for nonmember banks are based on data reported weekly
by the smaller member banks, using ratios that relate nonmember amounts
to the amounts reported by smaller member banks in the most recently
available mid-year or end-of-year Call Report. Previous estimates
reflected Call Report relationships as of December 31, 1975.
Prepared by Edward R. Fry and Mary Jane Harrington, Banking Section,
Division of Research and Statistics.
A-
2
estimated, accounting for about two-thirds of the revision in total loans
at all commercial banks. Benchmark revisions in U.S. Treasury securities
and other securities were relatively small for nonmember banks--$0.2
billion and $3.6 billion higher, respectively.
(b) Revisions in the original data reported weekly by member
banks, which are incorporated into the all-commercial bank credit series,
were unusually large. Loans and investments, including interbank loans,
as originally reported by member banks were revised upward for the first
half of 1976--$3.4 billion as of June 30, 1976. This source of error
accounted for about one-third of the total revision in all-commercial
bank credit.1/ While the reported member bank data have sometimes revised
substantially, the 1976 revisions were larger than usual. Analysis of the
data indicated that loans in one District had been consistently understated
following introduction of a net loans concept in the March Call.2/ This
understatement affected both the member bank totals and the nonmember
estimates derived from the small member bank data. Revised data for this
District were incorporated into the member bank series before the new
nonmember estimates were computed. Also, various smaller revisions for
other Districts were incorporated in the revision. Monthly patterns of
change between the old and new series were affected to some extent by
the revisions in member bank data beginning in April and by the substitution
of member bank Call data for June 30, 1976.
(c) Bank credit estimates were raised slightly by downward
revision of interbank loans which are netted out of the bank loans series.3/
On June 30, 1976, the estimating error in this item was small relative
to past experience--$0.3 billion--and contributed only nominally to the
total error in bank credit. This revision reflects offsetting errors
in reported data from member banks and in the nonmember/country member
bank estimating ratio that had been carried forward from the December 1975
Call.
1/
2/
3/
Reported member bank data can be checked,directly with the Call Report
only infrequently--when the last-Wednesday of June or December happens
to be a Call date, as was the case on June 30, 1976. In cases
where the last-Wednesday of June or December does not fall on the
Call date, differences between the last-Wednesday reported data and
the Call reflect "window-dressing," and errors in estimating this item
often have contributed significantly to revisions in the series.
Beginning in the March 1976 Call, both gross loans and loans net of
unearned income and loan loss reserves were reported. The gross loan
concept, used historically in the bank credit series, has been continued.
Domestic interbank loans, including Federal funds transactions with
banks, are estimated on the basis of reported data for member banks
and nonmember estimates relying on data reported by small member banks
and Call Report ratios of nonmember to small member interbank loans.
A-
3
Business loan estimates were raised $2.0 billion on the basis
of the June Call, about the same amount as in other recent revisions but
somewhat more than the longer-run average. On the revised basis, business
loans declined at an annual rate of 2.7 per cent over the January-June
1976 period compared with a previously estimated decline of 4.9 per cent.
Real estate loans also showed a substantial upward revision--$1.5 billion.
This was about double the average error of recent years. Initial
estimates of total loans and of business and real estate loans, the two
largest loan categories, tend to be biased downward, and benchmark
revisions over the years generally have raised the levels and growth rates
of these series.1/
Outstanding loans to nonbank financial institutitons and to
brokers and dealers in securities were somewhat lower on the Call date
than had been estimated. Ordinarily these estimates, which rely heavily
on weekly reporting bank data, are changed little by Call Report benchmarks for nonweekly reporting banks, since smaller banks are relatively
unimportant lenders in these financial categories. Agricultural loans,
which are concentrated at the smaller banks, also showed a small downward
revision.
On balance, $5.9 billion of the total $8.6 billion upward
revision in total loans as of June 30, 1976, was in the residual category
"all other loans." It is likely that part of this revision eventually
will be reflected in consumer loans, adding to the relatively strong
expansion of these loans already reflected in the estimates for the year
1976. Consumer loans, which are derived from consumer credit survey
reports, were not affected by this benchmark revision; however, this
series also will be benchmarked to the Call when total consumer credit
data are revised. Revisions in these loans generally have been upward.
1/
Data for loan categories are available currently only for weekly
reporting banks. Estimates for other commercial banks are made
largely on the basis of the movement of total loans at the smaller
banks, the trend of business and other loans as indicated by the most
recent Call Report, and patterns for previous years established in
the semiannual benchmarking.
Table I
COMMERCIAL BANK
CREDIT 1/
COMPARISON OF OLD AND REVISED RATES OF GROWTH*
(Seasonally adjusted changes at annual percentage rates)
Total loans & US Treasury
investments2/ securities
Old Revised Old Revised
1976--1st half
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
4.9
quarter
quarter
quarterquarters
2nd half2/
year 1976-
/
1976--January
February
March
April
May
June
July /
AugustSeptembe /
October-,
November-'
December 1977--January2 /
February I/
2/
*
p/
7.7
5.5
4.3
7.2
7.9
Other
securities
Old Revised
--
36.8
38.5
-1.0
44.3
26.3
44.8
29.0
-1.3
10.6
-4.1
2.2
8.3
6.3
-3.6
3.6
7.5
6.5
10.6
Total 2/
loansOld Revised
1.6
5.0
Business 2
loans
Old Revised
-4.9
-2.7
-7.4
-2.1
3.5
9.6
-6.7
1.4
4.6
9.7
Real
estate
Old
Revised
8.0
9.3
11.0
9.2
8.7
9.6
7.6
6.7
5.3
4.6
7.4
7.0
8.1
7.0
6.6
7.2
7.1
9.3
6.4
7.3
21.5
22.0
3.2
3.5
4.9
6.1
0.8
2.2
7.7
10.0
1.7
-4.1
-10.0
5.9
1.7
-3.3
-9.1
6.7
0.8
3.3
0.7
1.7
3.8
1.9
0.7
0.5
2.2
2.9
6.0
9.7
2.1
6.8
4.0
-8.7
-17.5
-6.2
2.1
-2.1
4.7
-8.0
-16.9
0.7
3.4
7.2
10.7
8.8
6.9
8.6
5.1
9.8
11.5
11.4
11.2
9.4
6.8
9.7
5.7
8.9
18.2
5.7
-0.2
4.2
5.6
8.8
17.9
5.9
6.2
7.7
1.7
-0.7
5.5
-2.1
6.9
19.2
12.9
-3.3
7.5
18.3
14.0
-3.3
6.7
7.5
10.0
9.3
5.9
10.8
9.1
9.0
10.6
16.0
9.9
16.0
9.4
8.1
10.0
8.6
9.9
8.2
11.5
3.5
6.1
6.9
5.4
5.4
2.1
4.5
7.1
8.5
11.1
6.3
7.9
24.2
50.4
54.0
24.5
40.0
12.9
24.2
51.9
7.1
8.2
6.1
12.2
9.4
2.0
2.2
8.4
5.8
12.1
9.6
1.7
-16.6
29.8
-12.6
-6.4
10.3
28.0
-21.5
32.3
-13.8
-7.6
11.5
26.6
13.3
3.3
8.2
3.3
22.0
-6.4
10.8
3.3
8.2
4.1
21.9
-6.4
9.0
14.8
8.9
14.5
-9.9
56.4
-9.9
57.4
-3.2
5.6
-4.0
5.6
54.0
25.8
38.6
20.6
0.8
8.5
8.6
9.9
Last-Wednesday-of-month series except for June and December which are adjusted to the last business day
of the month.
Includes outstanding amounts of loans reported as sold outright by banks to their own foreign branches,
nonconsolidated nonbank affiliates of the bank's holding company (if not a bank) and nonconsolidated
nonbank subsidiaries of holding comparlies.
Data revised to reflect adjustment to June 30, 1976 Call Report benchmark.
Preliminary.
Table II
SEASONALLY ADJUSTED BANK CREDIT1/
COMPARISON OF OLD AND REVISED LEVELS*
(In billions of dollars)
Total loans &
investmentsOld Revised
Total2/
loansOld Revised
Business
loansOld Revised
Real
estate
Old Revised
728.2
732.5
737.7
81.0
84.4
88.2
81.0
84.5
88.3
145.0
144.5
143.3
145.0
144.6
143.5
501.6
502.3
503.9
502.2
503.4
505.9
179.1
177.8
174.0
179.2
178.0
174.3
135.2
136.4
138.2
135.5
136.8
138.9
738.7
742.0
743.3
744.5
748.4
753.3
90.0
93.0
94.0
90.2
93.1
94.7
144.0
144.0
144.1
144.3
144.4
144.8
504.7
505.0
505.2
510.0
510.9
513.8
173.1
173.4
173.1
174.4
174.9
174.9
139.0
140.0
140.6
140.2
141.3
142.1
747.7
752.8
756.6
754.7
760.0
763.7
92.7
August /
September-
95.0
94.0
93.0
95.5
94.4
145.7
146.1
147.1
146.1
146.5
147.5
509.3
511.7
515.5
515.6
518.0
521.8
173.9
173.6
174.6
175.8
175.8
176.9
141.5
141.7
142.7
143.2
143.9
145.2
October /
Novemberp
December p
764.3
770.3
771.6
771.4
777.6
778.7
93.5
94.3
96.5
93.8
94.7
96.9
147.5
150.2
149.4
148.0
150.7
149.9
523.3
525.8
525.7
529.6
532.2
531.9
177.4
179.3
178.8
179.6
181.7
181.2
143.5
144.4
145.6
146.3
147.4
148.7
777.4
787.0
784.5 95.7
794.0 100.2
96.1
100.7
149.0
149.7
149.4
150.1
532.7
537.1
539.0
543.2
180.0
181.5
182.5
184.0
146.6
148.0
149.9
151.4
April
May
June
July
/
1977--Januaryp-/
February-
2/
Other
securities
Old Revised
727.6
731.2
735.4
1976--January.
February
March
1/
US Treasury
securities
Old
Revised
Last-Wednesday-of-month series except for June and December which are adjusted to the last business day
of the month.
Includes outstanding amounts of loans reported as sold outright by banks to their own foreign branches,
nonconsolidated nonbank affiliates of the bank's holding company (if not a bank) and nonconsolidated
nonbank subsidiaries of holding companies.
Data revised to reflect adjustment to June 30, 1976 Call Report benchmark.
Preliminary.
Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (1977, April 18). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19770419_part2
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_19770419_part2,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {1977},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19770419_part2},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}