greenbooks · July 16, 1984
Greenbook/Tealbook
Prefatory Note
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CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
CLASS III
- FOMC
July 13,
SUPPLEMENT
CURRENT ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CONDITIONS
Prepared for the
Federal Open Market Committee
By the Staff
Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System
1984
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
THF DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY
Industrial Production. .
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Industrial production . .
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TABLE:
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Producer Price Index
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Retail Sales .
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TABLE:
Retail sales
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Personal income and expenditures. .
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TABLE:
Recent changes
Errata
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in
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producer prices
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TABLE:
THE DOMESTIC FINANCIAL ECONOMY
TABLES:
Monetary aggregates . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .
Commercial bank credit and short- and intermediateterm business credit. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
Selected financial market quotations. . . . . . . . .
.
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. .
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INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
Errata . .
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1
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY
Industrial Production
Industrial production increased an estimated 0.5 percent in June
following a 0.4 percent rise in May.
year had averaged 1 percent per month.
largest for equipment,
Production advances earlier in the
June production gains were
energy and autos, which rose 2-1/2 percent to an
annual rate of 7.8 million units.
Output of steel dropped nearly 3 percent
and production of construction supplies was off 0.3 percent.
By industry
grouping, manufacturing output rose 0.4 percent, while coal mining and oil
and gas well drilling were up sharply and unusually hot weather resulted in
strong demand for electricity in June.
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
(Percentage change from preceding period;
based on seasonally adjusted data)
1984
Apr.
QQ2
Q
-----
Annual
rate-----
June
-- Monthly rate-.9
.4
.5
8.0
6.1
-0.9
9.1
9.0
14.4
1.0
.8
-. 4
1.3
.8
2.1
.6
.4
-. 2
.6
1.1
.6
.6
.4
.6
.4
.9
.8
14.8
6.5
.5
-. 1
-. 3
12.3
20.6
0.5
10.9
8.8
11.5
6.6
5.0
.9
1.3
.1
.8
.1
.1
.4
-. 2
.6
.4
.3
1.4
11.5
8.0
Final products
Consumer goods
Durable
Nondurable
Business equipment
Defense and space equipment
11.9
7.4
16.0
4.1
19.1
17.4
Construction supplies
Materials
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Energy materials
Total
1984
May
3
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY
Retail Sales
Retail sales increased 0.8 percent in June, and the estimated gains
for April and May were revised upward.
All major types of stores except
gasoline stations contributed to the June advance.
Sales excluding
automotive, gasoline and nonconsumer stores rose 0.7 percent, led by a
2.9 percent advance in spending for such largely discretionary goods as
general merchandise, apparel, and furniture and appliances--the GAF
grouping of stores.
percent.
For the second quarter as a whole, sales were up 2.7
Spending at the automotive group increased 4.4 percent and
expenditures for food rose 2.0 percent.
The 3.8 percent quarterly increase
in GAF sales was the largest since the first quarter of 1981.
RETAIL SALES
(Percent change from previous period;
based on seasonally adjusted data)
Q1
Q2
1984
Apr.
2.9
3.5
2.7
2.5
3.0
1.6
GAF2
1983
Q4
May
June
3.5
.5
.8
--
3.5
.4
3.0
2.2
2.7
.1
.7
3.3
3.2
3.8
4.0
.3
2.9
Durable
Automotive group
Furniture & appliances
6.8
9.4
3.4
5.1
5.7
3.5
4.1
4.4
4.3
6.0
7.6
4.6
.9
1.2
-2.2
2.1
2.6
6.3
Nondurable
Apparel
Food
General merchandise 3
Gasoline stations
1.0
4.2
.1
2.9
-.7
2.7
2.4
2.2
3.4
.3
2.0
6.1
2.0
2.8
2.1
2.2
4.0
2.1
3.7
.3
.3
.4
-.6
1.2
1.9
.1
2.2
.4
1.9
-1.5
Total sales
(Real)
1
Total, less automotive,
gasoline and
nonconsumer stores
1. BCD series 59. Data are available approximately 3 weeks following the
retail sales release.
2. General merchandise, apparel, furniture and appliance stores.
3. General merchandise excludes mail-order nonstores.
5
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY
Producer Price Index
Producer prices of finished goods were unchanged in June for the third
month, as the food and gasoline indexes
fell.
Prices of goods other than
food and energy advanced 0.2 percent-similar to the average monthly pace
over the past year--with the indexes for most consumer items little changed,
or even down.
Prices of capital equipment were unchanged in June, and were
only about 2-1/2 percent above their year-earlier level.
Finished food prices fell 0.6 percent in the June PPI, as major declines
were posted for meats, poultry, fish, and eggs.
At the farm level, the
index for crude foods also fell for the third month, with notable declines
for livestock and oilseeds.
However, developments in commodity markets
since the PPI pricing date show livestock prices turning up.
At earlier stages of processing, prices of intermediate materials less
food and energy rose 0.3 percent in June after two months of little change.
Although the index for crude nonfood materials excluding energy posted another
large rise in June, the recent increases may reflect in part seasonal
adjustment difficulties.
RECENT CHANGES IN PRODUCER PRICES
(Percentage change; based on seasonally adjusted data)
Relative
Importance
Dec. 1983
1983
1983
Q4
1984
Q
Q2
-- Annual rate-Finished goods
Consumer foods
Consumer energy
Other consumer goods
Capital equipment
1
May
1984
June
--Monthly rate--
100.0
24.0
12.0
41.9
22.2
.6
2.3
-9.2
1.9
1.9
1.1
5.8
-10.4
1.5
1.8
6.0
17.4
-7.2
4.7
4.3
-. 3
-8.9
8.5
1.1
2.2
.0
-1.2
.5
.1
.2
.0
-. 6
-. 2
.3
.0
Intermediate materials 2
Exc. energy
94.8
79.5
1.5
3.0
2.5
4.1
2.6
3.5
3.6
2.1
.3
.1
.5
.3
Crude food materials
Crude energy
Other crude materials
52.8
31.3
15.9
8.0
-4.6
15.5
12.1
-2.3
2.4
13.7
-1.3
-9.2
-22.1
3.8
30.0
-2.7
.4
2.6
-2.3
.2
1.2
1. Changes are from final month of preceding period to final month of period
indicated.
2. Excludes materials for food manufacturing and animal feeds.
7
ERRATA
As a result of a word-processing error, one column of data from
the table on page
II-5 of the Greenbok was omitted.
shown on the next page.
A corrected table is
PFRSONAL INCOME AND EXPENDITURES
(Based on seasonally adjusted data)
1983
Q4
~
1984
Q1
May
-- Percent change from
previous Quarter1-Total personal income
Nominal
Real 2
Disposable personal income
Nominal
Real 2
Personal saving rate (percent)
Mar.
1984
Apr.
May
- -Percent change from
previous month 1--
11.1
13.5
8.1
9.4
7.4
n.a.
6.4
2.0
11.0
8.0
14.1
10.0
7.2
n.a.
7.2
2.4
6.9
5.2
6.3
5.2
5.9
n.a.
6.6
5.7
5.2
-- Changes in billions
of dollars from
previous quarter--
7.2
-- Changes in billions
of dollars from
previous month--
Total expenditures
49.8
55.3
56.9
5.4
36.1
24.5
Durables
New autos
Personal-use trucks
Furniture & appliances
15.8
4.2
2.5
4.7
16.5
6.3
.7
4.2
16.2
4.5
3.6
3.3
-2.0
-2.7
3.2
-. 2
7.1
-. 6
1.6
3.9
13.6
7.9
.4
.5
Nondurables
Food
Apparel
10.2
4.2
5.5
18.2
9.3
3.4
18.4
7.9
8.1
-2.2
-4.3
-2.1
20.2
13.4
4.8
4.0
-. 2
4.3
Services
23.8
20.6
22.2
9.6
8.8
6.9
1. Changes from previous quarter are at compound rates; monthly changes
are not compounded.
2. Personal income is deflated by the implicit deflator for personal
consumption expenditures.
9
MONETARY AGGREGATES
(Based on seasonally adjusted data unless otherwise noted)
1983
Q3
1.
2.
3.
1984
Q4
-----
July 13, 1984
1
Q1
Q2
May
June
Growth from
Q4 1983 to
June 1984
Percentage change at annual rates ----
Ml
M2
M3
6.1
6.9
10.2
12.8
8.7
11.3
11.5
7.3
8.6
Levels in billions
of dollars
June 1984
Selected components
4.
Currency
9.1
9.7
8.7
7.2
8.7
10.2
154.2
5.
Demand deposits
4.0
-0.5
1.2
3.6
-0.5
15.7
248.4
6.
Other checkable deposits
21.2
9.6
16.2
9.6
41.4
7.0
138.6
7.
M2 minus M12
6.1
9.7
6.9
7.2
7.5
5.9
1726.6
-8.1
Overnight RPs and Eurodollars, NSA
General purpose and broker/dealer money
market mutual fund shares, NSA
-13.1
Commercial banks
12.2
Savings deposits, SA, plus
4
11.0
MMDAs, NSA
13.7
Small time deposits
Thrift institutions
7.3
Savings deposits, SA, plus
4
MMDAs, NSA
1.0
Small time deposits
12.3
23.4
19.3
-6.1
39.7
-48.6
56.9
-1.2
12.4
9.8
5.4
15.3
6.6
3.3
4.9
18.9
8.7
148.7
738.2
5.9
19.3
7.3
6.5
4.4
6.4
-4.8
15.2
6.6
1.0
16.6
7.8
372.8
365.4
789.6
-7.0
18.8
-0.9
11.8
2.2
9.6
-1.8
12.7
-9.2
19.9
324.8
464.8
9.8
15.8
17.6
24.4
21.5
14.2
563.5
11.9
-4.6
63.5
15.7
-0.4
58.1
24.8
10.0
59.0
30.6
23.5
44.9
38.1
36.6
40.2
34.7
26.6
51.5
377.6
248.9
128.7
-17.8
15.2
-1.7
16.6
50.0
-3.9
10.9
18.4
5.7
6.8
38.1
3.9
5.7
28.1
6.4
8.6
-54.9
-54.7
42.3
58.4
90.1
3
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
M3 minus M2
5
Large time deposits
6
At commercial banks, net
At thrift institutions
Institution-only money market
mutual fund shares, NSA
Term RPs, NSA
Term Eurodollars, NSA
-MEMORANDA:
23.
Managed liabilities at commercial
banks (24+25)
24.
Large time deposits, gross
25.
Nondeposit funds
26.
Net due to related foreign
institutions, NSA
7
Other
27.
Average monthly change in billions of dollars --
-2.6
-2.0
-0.6
5.3
0.1
5.2
1.3
-2.0
3.2
2.1
2.0
0.6
0.9
-1.9
15.5
10.5
5.0
-1.8
9.7
-11.5
417.7
312.5
105.2
5.3
-0.2
-5.6
-5.9
-34.1
139.3
U.S. government deposits at commercial
8
12.9
0.7
-1.3
-3.7
-1.2
1.2
1.0
banks
Dollar amounts shown under memoranda for quar1. Quarterly growth rates are computed on a quarterly average basis.
terly changes are calculated on an end-month-of-quarter basis.
2. Nontransactions M2 is seasonally adjusted as a whole.
3. Overnight and continuing contract RPs issued to the nonbank public by commercial banks plus overnight Eurodollar
deposits issued by branches of U.S. banks to U.S. nonbank customers, both net of amounts held by money market mutual
funds.
Excludes retail
RPs, which are in the small time deposit component.
4. Growth rates are for savings deposits, seasonally adjusted, plus money market deposit accounts (MMDAs), not seasonally
adjusted. Commercial bank savings deposits excluding MMDAs declined during May and June at rates of 3.7 and 1.9 percent
institutions, savings deposits excluding MMDAs increased in May at a rate of 1.4 percent and
At thrift
respectively.
decreased in June at a rate of 2.7 percent.
5. The non-M2 component of M3 is seasonally adjusted as a whole.
institutions.
6. Net of large-denomination time deposits held by money market mutual funds and thrift
7. Consists of borrowings from other than commercial banks in the form of federal funds purchased, securities sold
under agreements to repurchase and other liabilities for borrowed money (including borrowings from the Federal
Data are partially
Reserve and unaffiliated foreign banks), loans sold to affiliates, loan RPs and other minor items.
estimated.
8. Consists of Treasury demand deposits at commercial banks and Treasury note balances.
28.
COMMERCIAL BANK CREDIT AND SHORT- AND INTERMEDIATE-TERM BUSINESS CREDIT
1
(Percentage changes at annual rates, based on seasonally adjusted data)
1983
Q4
Q1
Q2
----------------------1.
2.
Total loans and securities
3
at banks
Securities
3.
Treasury securities
4.
Other securities
5.
Total loans
3
3
19842
Apr.
May
JuneP
Levels in
bil. of dollars
JuneP
Commercial Bank Credit ----------------------
12.4
14.5
7.8
5.8
14.9
2.4
1658.4
10.8
4.4
-7.5
-10.3
2.5
-14.8
431.7
25.1
-1.9
-7.9
-7.7
10.3
-26.2
183.4
0.6
9.2
-7.1
-11.8
-3.8
-5.7
248.3
12.9
18.3
13.3
11.7
19.3
8.4
1226.7
10.1
18.8
16.5
8.5
27.7
12.7
455.1
6.
Business loans
7.
Security loans
60.8
0.0
-32.2
-17.6
26.8
-104.7
25.1
8.
Real estate loans
10.3
14.5
14.5
13.2
14.0
15.9
359.3
9.
Consumer loans
22.1
22.1
20.2
22.4
22.5
244.2
22.3
--------
Short- and Intermediate-Term Business Credit ----------
Business loans net of bankers
acceptances
10.6
18.1
16.7
8.2
27.5
13.7
445.5
by nonCommercial paper issued
4
financial firms
25.9
20.1
67.1
88.6
35.7
67.1
58.5
12.
Sum of lines 10 & 11
11.8
18.3
21.9
16.6
28.2
19.8
504.0
13.
Line 12 plus5 loans at foreign
branches
12.2
18.1
22.2
17.9
29.2
18.3
524.2
29.0
28.8
n.a.
7.2
7.2
n.a.
n.a.
18.9
-22.2
n.a.
54.1
61.2
n.a.
n.a.
15.3
14.9
n.a.
20.2
29.5
n.a.
n.a.
10.
11.
14.
15.
16.
Finance company loans to business
6
Total bankers acceptances outstanding
Total short- and intermediateterm business credit (sum of
lines 13, 14 and 15)
6
p--preliminary
n.a.--not available.
1. Average of Wednesdays for domestically chartered banks and average of current and preceding ends of months for
foreign-related
institutions.
2. Growth rates beginning 1984 have been estimated after adjusting for major changes in reporting panels and
definitions that caused breaks in series at the beginning of January. Data should be regarded as highly
preliminary.
3. 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.
4. Average of Wednesdays.
5. Loans at foreign branches are loans made to U.S. firms by foreign branches of domestically chartered banks.
6. Based on average of current and preceding ends of month.
SELECTED FINANCIAL MARKET QUOTATIONS 1
(Percent)
1981
Cyclical
peak
1983
Cyclical
low
Federal funds 2
20.06
8.42
9.41
9.75
11.25
1.84
1.50
Treasury bills
3-month
6-month
1-year
17.01
15.93
15.21
7.55
8.89
7.62
8.97
7.73
9.00
10.04
10.50
10.70
10.03
10.57
10.96
1.14
1.60
1.96
-.01
.07
.26
Commercial paper
1-month
3-month
18.63
18.29
8.00
7.97
9.14
9.13
10.16
10.52
11.12
11.23
1.98
2.10
.96
.71
Large negotiable CDs 3
1-month
3-month
6-month
18.90
19.01
18.50
8.08
8.12
8.20
9.23
9.31
9.43
10.47
11.10
11.80
11.28
11.56
12.18
2.05
2.25
2.75
.81
.46
.38
Eurodollar deposits 2
1-month
3-month
19.80
19.56
8.68
8.71
9.53
9.70
10.73
11.58
11.69
12.13
2.16
2.43
.96
.55
Bank prime rate
21.50
10.50
11.00
12.50
13.00
2.00
.50
8.71
10.86
9.57
10.79
11.29
12.68
10.74
12.68
1.17
1.89
-.55
.00
9.33
10.12
10.27
10.88
11.66
11.74
12.86
13.52
13.53
13.19
13.42
13.20
2.31
1.76
1.46
.33
-.10
-.33
FOMC
Jan. 30
1984
FOMC
May 22
July 12
Change from:
FOMC
FOMC
Jan. 30 May 22
Short-term rates
Treasury bill futures
-
Sept 1984 contract
c. 1985 contract
Intermediate- and long-term rates
U.S. Treasury (constant maturity)
16.59
3-year
15.84
10-year
15.21
30-year
Municipal revenue
(Bond Buyer index)
14.24
Corporate--A utility
Recently offered
Home mortgage rates
S&L fixed-rate
FNMA ARM. 1-yr.
9.21
9.954
10.824
10.88
18.33*
11.64
12.90e
1 4.90e
15.05e
2.15
18.63
N.A.
1982
12.55
10.49
13.295
11.405
14.045
13.005
14.665
13.705
1.37
2.30
Lows
FOMC
1984
FOMC
Jan. 30
May 22
1983
Highs
.62
.70
Percent change from:
FOMC
FOMC
July 12
Jan. 30 May 22
StocK prices
1104.57
-9.6
-1.1
776.92 1287.20
1221.52 1116.62
Dow-Jones Industrial
-7.9
-2.0
88.43
86.64
58.80
99.63
94.12
NYSE Composite
-4.8
-11.3
202.68
192.92
118.65
249.03
217.53
X Composite
-2.7
240.80
234.22
-13.0
328.91
269.23
159.14
DAQ (OTC)
Thursday.
preceding
for
quotes
One-day
4.
ne-day quotes except as noted.
Friday.
preceding
for
quotes
One-day
5.
shown.
2. Averages for statement week closest to date
p--preliminary.
e--estimated.
3. Secondary market.
*September average.
PART II - INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
ERRATA
In
the table on page IV-19 entitled "Real GNP and Industrial Production in
Major Industrial Countries", the entry for Japan's GNP growth in 19 8 3-Q4
should be .8 percent;
percent.
the entry for GNP growth for 1984-Q1 should be
1.8
In the table on page IV-20 entitled "Consumer and Wholesale Prices
in Major Industrial Countries", the entry for percentage change in the
Japanese CPI in 1984-Q2 should be .8 percent.
Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (1984, July 16). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19840717_part3
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_19840717_part3,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {1984},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19840717_part3},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}