greenbooks · November 2, 1987
Greenbook/Tealbook
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CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
CLASS III - FOMC
October 30, 1987
SUPPLEMENT
CURRENT ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CONDITIONS
Prepared for the
Federal Open Market Committee
By the staff
Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System
TABLE OF CONTENTS
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY
Sales of new homes.....................................
Consumer surveys......................................
Tables
The market for new houses..............................
University of Michigan Index of Consumer Sentiment.....
Errata .................................................
THE FINANCIAL ECONOMY
Tables
Monetary aggregates...................................
Commercial bank credit and short- and intermediateterm business credit.................................
Selected financial market quotations...................
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
Import and Export Prices...............................
Page
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY
Sales of new homes.
Sales of new homes declined about 5 percent in September to 656,000
units at an annual rate.
For the third quarter as a whole, new home
sales were unchanged from the second quarter, but remained 7 percent
below the robust first-quarter pace.
The reduction in new home sales
during September reflected the 1/2 percentage point rise in interest
rates on conventional fixed-rate mortgages during that month.
Despite
the drop in sales, the inventory of new homes was essentially unchanged
in September at 359,000 units, nearly a seven-month supply at the
current sales pace.
The inventory figures have changed very little in
the past year.
The median and average prices of new homes sold in the third
quarter were $108,700 and $132,700, respectively, both up about 16
percent from a year earlier.
These price statistics are not adjusted
for changes in house quality or location of sales.
not yet available for the third quarter;
Adjusted prices are
second-quarter information
indicated that over four-fifths of the recorded price increase was
attributable to house quality improvements and to changes in the
regional mix of sales.
Consumer surveys
The University of Michigan Survey of Consumer Attitudes showed a
sizable drop in consumer confidence among those respondents polled on or
after October 19.
About one-third of the October sample
- 1 -
(153 out of
- 2 -
500) were called after the stock market crash.
Prior to October 19, the
overall sentiment index value was running at 92.5--about the same as the
September reading; after October 19, the index fell to 82.4.
The 10
point drop in the index is comparable to the fall off that occurred in
March 1980 after the imposition of credit controls.
The drop is
entirely due to changed expectations of business conditions and buying
plans.
The latest Michigan figures should be interpreted with caution.
First, the results stand in contrast to a post-October 19 reading from
the Conference Board survey, which showed little change in its index of
consumer confidence.
Second, within the Michigan survey, some of the
post-October 19 results are puzzling.
In particular, evaluations of
current personal finances actually rose a bit in the latter part of the
month and expected personal finances were essentially unchanged.
However, despite the favorable responses on personal finances, the index
of buying conditions dropped sharply.
- 3 -
THE MARKET FOR NEW HOUSES
1987
r
1987
Aug .r
674
675
692
656
126.8
132.7
128.7
129.6
139.8
(13.2)
(15.7) (10.2) (14.5) (22.6)
92.0
104.0
108.7
(9.2)
(12.9)
(16.3) (10.5) (16.4) (21.7)
357
358
359
358
360
359
5.8
6.5
6.6
6.5
6.4
6.8
Q2
Q3P
748
674
112.1
(11.1)
1986
Sales Volume
Thousands of units, SAAR
Sales Price
Average ($1,000, NSA)
(Percent change from
year earlier)
Median ($1,000, NSA)
(Percent change from
year earlier)
Inventory
Units for sale
(Thousands of units,
end of period)
Months' supply
(At current sales rate)
July
104.0
106.5
Sept.p
115.6
Months' supply data derived by Census Bureau by seasonal adjustment of
the ratio of homes for sale to homes sold. It may, therefore, not
agree with the seasonally adjusted components shown on the table.
r--revised.
p--preliminary.
Note:
-4
-
University of Michigan Index of Consumer Sentiment
1987
August
1. Total (Feb. 1966=100)
September
October
Post-19th
Pre-19th
94.4
93.6
92.5
82.4
2.
Current personal finances
122
119
117
121
3.
Expected personal finances
127
124
128
129
4.
Near term business conditions
125
122
113
87
5.
Long term business conditions
93
92
98
72
6.
Buying conditions
157
162
156
134
NOTE: Figures on financial business, and buying conditions are the percent saying "good times" (or "better') minus the percent saying "bad times" (or "worse"), plus 100/
-5-
Errata
Shown on the next three pages are tables that were omitted from the
Appendix to Part II of the Greenbook.
II-A-5 of the Greenbook.
These tables should follow page
-6
-
Table 1
Deficit Targets in the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Balanced Budget Act
(Fiscal years, billions of dollars)
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
Original law1
172
144
108
72
36
0
Amended law 2
n.a
n.a
144
136
100
64
28
0
CBO baseline deficit
221 a
157
183
192
176
165
151
n.a
OMB current services
deficit
221 a
159
161
166
147
123
105
n.a.
1991
1992
1993
n.a.
n.a
Memo:
a--actual
1. The original non-automatic spending cut mechanism was supposed to go into effect if
the projected "snapshop" deficit exceeded the target by more than $10 billion for 1986
through 1990. This "margin for error" was not allowed for the final year (1991).
2. The restored automatic spending cut mechanism would be triggered if the "snapshot"
deficit projection exceeds the target by more than $10 billion for 1988 through 1992.
This "margin for error" is not allowed for the final year (1993).
Table 2
Timetable for Sequestration Procedures
Action
Fiscal year
1988
1989-1993
Earliest enactment date for deficit
reduction actions.
January 1, 1987
Jan.l (before
fiscal year
begins.
President submits the Mid-session
Review of the budget (establishing
the economic and technical
assumptions).
Not applicable
July 15
Initial OMB/CBO "snapshot."
October 10
August 15
CBO issues initial report to
OMB and Congress.
October 15
August 20
OMB issues initial report to
the President and Congress.
October 20
August 25
President issues initial order.
October 20
August 25
Fiscal year begins and initial
order becomes effective.
October 1 (order
becomes effective
on Oct. 20, when
issued)
October 1
CBO issues revised report to
OMB and Congress.
November 15
October 10
OMB issues revised report to
the President and Congress.
November 20
October 15
President issues final order,
which becomes effective
immediately.
November 20
October 15
House and Senate majority leaders
may introduce a joint resolution
modifying the final order.
Comptroller General issues compliance
order.
Within 10 sessiondays of revised
OMB report
December 15
Within 10
sessiondays of
revised OMB
report
November 15
1. The amended Act also includes a procedure, not summarized on this table,
that allows the President to modify, with congressional approval, the impact
of a sequester order on various defense accounts.
Table 3
Regular Budget Process
Budget action
Deadline
President submits budget request.
First Monday after
January 3
CBO reports to budget committees
on fiscal policy and budget
priorities.
February 15
Senate budget committee reports
budget resolution to floor.
April 1
Congress completes action on
budget resolution.
April 15
House appropriations committee
reports last annual appropriations
bill.
June 10
Congress completes action on
reconciliation legislation.
June 15
House completes action on
appropriation bills.
June 30
-9
-
MONETARY AGGREGATES
(Based on seasonally adjusted data unless otherwise noted)
1985:Q4
to
1986:Q4
15.3
9.0
8.9
1. M1
2.
M2
3. M3
Q2
Q3
1987
July
Aug.
Percentage change at annual rates
6.4
-0.1
5.3
1.6
2.3
2.9
2.6
6.1
4.2
4.9
7.3
2.3
Sept.Y
0.5
5.2
5.5
Growth from
Q4 1986 to
Sept. 1987P
6.1
Levels in billions
of dollars
Sept. 1987P
Selected components
4.
Ml-A
5.
Currency
6.
Demand deposits
7.
Other checkable deposits
8.
2
M2 minus M1
11.
12.
Overnight RPs and Eurodollars, NSA
General purpose and broker/dealer money
market mutual fund shares, NSA
Commercial banks
Savings deposits, SA,
13.
14.
15.
plus MMDAs, NSA
Small time deposits
Thrift institutions
Savings deposits, SA,
16.
plus MMDAs, NSA
Small time deposits
9.
10.
17.
10.0
2.7
-2.3
7.5
6.6
6.7
11.6
0.0
-8.1
28.5
14.0
6.9
0.8
14.7
-0.5
3.2
-1.7
495.7
6.3
6.9
8.1
194.5
-4.8
0.8
4.5
6.2
9.5
4.7
255.5
4.0
2.9
6.3
6.9
2123.3
3.2
48.2
32.4
79.8
1.1
2.7
17.2
2.9
20.9
0.3
216.5
907.6
-3.8
6.2
1.7
540.4
367.2
923.3
-24.3
17.3
6.8
-1.1
-1.4
3
16.0
-4.2
4.3
0.8
-4.6
5.0
-2.4
7.9
3.8
-2.9
11.0
3.4
0.7
6.3
5.0
3
12.0
-1.2
9.7
1.0
-4.0
10.5
-7.6
13.0
-4.3
12.6
8.7
12.1
12.6
1.6
11.7
M3 minus M24
-9.3
-10.0
11.3
294.1
418.0
505.2
6.8
747.3
Large time deposits
3.0
9.3
6.3
-0.3
4.4
6.9
469.4
5
At commercial banks, net
At thrift institutions
Institution-only money market
mutual fund shares, NSA
Term RPs, NSA
Term Eurodollars, NSA
2.7
3.4
18.3
-8.4
4.4
10.4
-4.6
8.8
0.0
13.5
1.9
17.3
314.2
155.2
30.3
31.1
3.2
-11.4
70.7
-0.5
1.9
23.3
26.3
31.0
-5.6
-42.9
0.0
2.3
93.2
-38.8
16.9
65.8
80.7
108.1
98.1
-- Average monthly change in billions of dollars -MEMORANDA:
24. Managed liabilities at commercial
banks (25+26)
25.
Large time deposits, gross
26.
Nondeposit funds
27.
Net.due to related foreign
institutions, NSA
28.
29.
6
Other
U.S. government deposits at commercial
banks
7
2.0
0.6
1.4
6.9
6.3
0.6
2.0
-0.8
2.8
8.5
-1.1
-7.4
4.6
-1.0
5.6
9.9
-0.3
10.2
544.8
370.5
174.3
0.6
1.5
4.2
-5.8
6.3
12.2
10.9
0.8
-0.9
-1.4
-1.6
-0.7
-2.0
163.4
0.4
3.4
-1.5
-3.2
4.4
-5.8
23.3
1. Dollar amounts shown under memoranda are calculated on an end-month-of-quarter basis.
2. Nontransactions M2 is seasonally adjusted as a whole.
3. Growth rates are for savings deposits, seasonally adjusted, plus money market deposit accounts (MMDAs) not
seasonally adjusted. Commercial bank savings deposits excluding MHDAs increased during August at a rate of a
9.5 percent and were unchanged for September. At thrift institutions, savings deposits excluding MMDAs increased
during August at a rate of 9.0 percent and decreased at a 3.0 percent rate in September.
4. The non-M2 component of M3 is seasonally adjusted as a whole.
5. Net of large-denomination time deposits held by money market mutual funds and thrift institutions.
6. 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
Reserve and unaffiliated foreign banks, loan RPs and other minor items).
Data are partially estimated.
7. Consists of Treasury demand deposits and note balances at commercial banks.
p--preliminary.
-
10 -
COMMERCIAL BANK CREDIT AND SHORT- AND INTERMEDIATE-TERM BUSINESS CREDIT
(Percentage changes at annual rates, based on seasonally adjusted data)
1985:Q4
to
1986:Q4
92
Q3
1987
July
Atuidi
Sept.
Levels in
bil. of dollars
Sept.
------ Commercial Bank Cr«1dit --------------------1.
2.
Total loans and securities
at banks
Securities
9.8
7 .7
7.3
1.3
10.8
9.7
2206.7
14.2
.4
8.5
3.0
315.8
6.4
526.3
11.3
331.7
-1.8
194.6
3.
U.S. government securities
11.9
3 .3
18.7
11.0
33.0
4.
Other securities
18.0
6 .l
-7.9
-9.8
-] 12.2
8.4
8 .7
7.0
0.8
9.2
10.7
1680.4
6.6
4 .6
1.9
-5.2
0.2
10.6
560.5
5.
Total loans
6.
Business loans
7.
Security loans
-3.7
40 .7
26.5
-14.2
66.2
27.3
45.0
8.
Real estate loans
14.1
19 .3
13.6
13.8
16.1
10.4
556.2
9.
Consumer loans
7.3
0 .5
6.5
3.1
8.8
7.6
318.9
Other loans
5.4
0 .2
0.0
-17.4
4.2
13.3
199.8
10.
----- Short- and Intermediate-Term Business Credit ----11.
Business loans net of bankers
acceptances
2
12.
Loans at foreign branches
13.
Sum of lines 11 & 12
14.
Commercial paper issued by
nonfinancial firms
15.
Sums of lines 13 & 14
16.
Bankers acceptances:
related
17.
4.0
1.4
-4.8
-1.7
10.9
-14.7
25.5
45.9
73.6
-41.6
16.7
3.4
2.1
-3.4
9.1
570.9
17.6
5.1
-11.4
-14.9
0.6
-16.6
0.4
-4.8
-1.7
23.8
22.5
46.2
6.1
1.5
-3.1
554.2
78.2
7.8
649.1
27.4
-6.7
35.7
-2.3
-0.2
7.1
684.8
16.7
15.2
n.a.
191.3 (Aug)
3.2
n.a.
872.1 (Aug)
U.S. trade
-3.9
Line 15 plus bankers acceptances:
U.S. trade related
18.
Finance company loans to business
19.
Total short- and intermediateterm business credit (sum of
lines 17 & 18)
4.4
3
11.7
17.9
n.a.
5.8
8.6
n.a.
1.8
1. Average of Wednesdays.
2. Loans at foreign branches are loans made to U.S. firms by foreign branches of domestically chartered banks.
3. Based on average of data for current and preceding ends of month.
4. Consists of acceptances that finance U.S. imports, U.S. exports, and domestic shipment and storage of goods.
n.a.--not available.
p--preliminary.
- 11 SELECTED FINANCIAL MARKET QUOTATIONS1
(Percent)
1987
Spring
FOMC
highs Sept. 32 Sept. 22
Change from:
FOMC
Oct. 163 Oct. 27 Oct. 16 Sept. 22
Short-term rates
6.90
6.85
7.20
7.59
7.09
-.50
-.11
6.02
6.28
6.80
6.19
6.30
6.98
6.49
6.75
7.11
6.93
7.58
7.74
5.23
6.01
6.37
-1.70
-1.57
-1.37
-1.26
-.74
-.74
Commercial paper
1-month
3-month
6.96
7.16
6.88
6.97
7.34
7.44
7.94
8.65
7.04
7.38
-.90
-1.27
-.30
-.06
Large negotiable CDs s
1-month
3-month
6-month
7.07
7.33
7.65
6.90
7.01
7.35
7.36
7.43
7.80
7.92
8.90
9.12
7.03
7.51
7.58
-.89
-1.39
-1.54
-.33
.08
-.22
Eurodollar deposits
1-month
3-month
7.05
7.36
7.01
7.11
7.36
7.44
7.79
8.69
7.86
8.81
.07
.12
.50
1.37
Bank prime rate
8.25
8.25
8.75
9.25
9.00
-.25
.25
U.S. Treasury (constant maturity)
3-year
8.35
10-year
8.92
30-year
9.07
8.48
9.29
9,47
8.64
9.37
9.53
9.52
10.23
10.24
8.06
8.92
9.04
Municipal revenue
(Bond Buyer)
8.68
8.47
8.65
9.59
9.01
-.58
Corporate A utility
(recently offered)
10.27
10.60e
10.96e
11.50
10.70e
-.80
-.26
Home mortgage rates
S&L fixed-rate
S&L ARM, 1-yr.
10.81
8.01
10.63
7.84
10.99
7.99
11.58
8.45
11.36
8.37
-.22
-.08
.37
.38
Federal funds'
Treasury bills
3-month
6-month
1-year
Intermediate- and long-term rates
1986
Highs
Stock prices
Dow-Jones Industrial
NYSE Composite
AMEX Composite
NASDAQ (OTC)
1955.57
145.75
285.19
411.16
-1.46
-1.31
-1.20
-.58
-.45
-.49
Record
highs
1987
FOMC
Sept. 22
Oct. 27
Change from:
Record
FOMC
Sept. 22
highs
2722.42
187.99
365.01
455.26
2568.05
178.48
351.33
437.90
1846.49
130.51
238.52
296.34
-32.17
-30.58
-34.65
-34.91
1. One-day quotes except as noted.
2. Day prior to increase in discount rate on
Sept. 4, 1987.
3. Last business day prior to stock market
decline on Monday, Oct. 19, 1987.
4. Average for two-week reserve maintenance
periods closest to date shown, except Sept. 3
which is one-week average ending Sept. 2, and
last observation, which is the averaae to date
-28.10
-26.88
-32.11
-32.33
for the week ending Oct. 28, 1987.
5. Secondary market.
6. Averages for statement week closest
to date shown.
7. One-day quotes for closest Thursday.
8. Quotes for week ending Friday
closest to date shown.
e--estimate.
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
Import and Export Prices
Price increases for U.S. exports and imports slowed somewhat during
the third quarter, according to data released on October 29 by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Import prices rose at an annual rate of 7
percent in the third quarter, while export prices increased 1.2 percent.
BLS IMPORT AND EXPORT PRICE MEASURES 1
(percentage change from previous period, annual rates)
1986
Exports
Imports
Oil
Non-oil
Food
Chemicals
Crude Materials
Intermediate
mfg. products
Machinery and
transport eq.
Passenger Cars
Miscellaneous
mfg. articles
!1
Q3
-6.6
Q4
4.9
3.2
-37.5
12.1
17.9
0.4
12.1
10.4
94.3
2.4
-13.3
-0.8
1.6
28.6
200.6
10.4
-17.9
12.1
20.2
10.0
1.6
8.2
10.0
7.0
7.4
14.3
13.0
8.2
19.3
0.4
18.3
1. Not seasonally adjusted, surveyed las
--^
-- * -
4.1
-
1987
Q2
-
198703
- ~ -
Q3
-3-
_ -- _-- 19860
- Q^ "
5.4
11.7
1.2
17.0
10.8
7.4
12.6
10.0
7.0
16.1
5.3
3.2
3.2
11.7
15.5
78.5
7.1
-5.8
6.5
10.7
15.6
15.6
10.2
0.8
-1.2
7.0
14.3
5.7
9.4
49.7
7.4
4.9
13.9
month of each quarter.
Prices of non-oil imports rose 5.3 percent at an annual rate in the
third quarter.
This rate was down from the 10.8
recorded in the second quarter.
percent increase
Prices of crude materials accelerated,
partly the consequence of large increases in the prices of wood and
rubber imports.
Prices for machinery and transport equipment rose only 0.8 percent
in the third quarter, the smallest quarterly increase since March 1985.
From March 1985 to June 1987 the quarterly increases had averaged 10
percent.
The decline in the price of passenger cars more noticeably
- 12 -
- 13 -
reflects the effects of a slight appreciation of the dollar during the
calculation period.
Prices of imported fuel rose 16.1 percent in the third quarter
after sharper increases in the three previous quarters.
Prices of crude
oil imports rose 21.1 percent over the quarter, while prices of products
declined 0.4 percent.
The disparity between the movements in the prices
of crude oil and products is partly explained by the longer delivery
lag, due to generally greater shipping distances
for crude oil.
The rise in export prices was smaller than in the previous three
quarters.
Prices of food exports were down 20.2 percent, and prices of
chemicals, after rising at an annual rate of over 21 percent in the
previous six months, rose just 4.1 percent over the quarter.
Coal
prices rose 11.7 percent in the third quarter, the largest quarterly
increase in more than five years.
The BLS prices are part of the data used to calculate the GNP
export and import deflators.
The BLS prices for the third quarter are
consistent with estimates used by the Bureau of Economic Analysis for
the recent GNP press release.
Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (1987, November 2). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19871103_part2
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_19871103_part2,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {1987},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19871103_part2},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}