greenbooks · May 18, 1992
Greenbook/Tealbook
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CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
CLASS III - FOMC
May 15, 1992
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
Page
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY
Industrial production and capacity utilization .
.
..
Retail inventories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Michigan index of consumer sentiment . . . . . . . . .
1
2
3
Tables
Growth in selected components of industrial production
Capacity utilization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Changes in manufacturing and trade inventories . . . .
Inventories relative to sales. ..
. . . . . . . . . .
University of Michigan Survey Research Center:
Survey of Consumer Attitudes . . . . . . . . . . . .
4
4
6
6
7
Charts
Consumer sentiment . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .
.
Ratio of inventories to sales. . . . . . . . . . . . .
3
5
THE FINANCIAL ECONOMY
The May 1992 Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on
Bank Lending Practices. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8
Tables
Monetary aggregates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
Commercial bank credit and short- and
intermediate-term business credit. . . . . . . . ...
Selected financial market quotations . . . . . . .. .
12
13
14
THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY
Developments in foreign industrial countries .....
Errata . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . ..
15
15
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES
THE DOMESTIC NONFINANCIAL ECONOMY
Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization
The index of industrial production rose 0.5 percent in April.
Revised figures now indicate that IP dropped somewhat less in
January and rose slightly more in March than reported earlier.
As a
result, the cumulative rise in production over the past three months
is now estimated to have retraced all but 0.2 percent of the decline
that occurred between last October and January.
Much of the upward revision to the index over the January-toMarch period reflects higher levels of output of construction
supplies, notably steel and lumber, and of materials, such as paper.
textiles and chemicals.
In addition, in March, production of
business equipment now appears to have been a bit stronger.
In April, the increase in output of motor vehicles and parts
contributed 0.2 percentage point to the overall rise in IP.
Production of other consumer goods moved up just a little: further
sizable increases in production of furniture and carpeting are
estimated to have been offset by cuts in production of appliances
and clothing.
Production of business equipment (other than motor
vehicles) rose moderately for a third month.
Output of industrial
equipment has posted a solid gain in each of the last three months.
after dropping almost every month since September 1990.
Production
of office and computing equipment has been rising rapidly since
October; the sustained gains have cumulated to about a 15 percent
increase at an annual rate.
The April rise of 0.6 percent in the
index for construction supplies was fairly broadly based.
While
production of steel materials dropped back last month, output of
durable materials related to motor vehicle assembly moved up.
-2Output of nondurable materials was boosted by strong increases in
paper, petroleum, and chemicals.
Capacity utilization in manufacturing reached 77.7 percent in
April; rates of utilization in both primary and advanced processing
remain about 5 percentage points below the levels that prevailed in
September 1990.
Retail Inventories
Retail inventories rose in March at a $23.4 billion annual rate
in current-cost terms; about half of the increase was in auto
dealers' stocks.
For non-auto retailers, the accumulation of stocks
in March retraced the bulk of the drawdowns posted in the preceding
two months.
As a result, non-auto retail inventories showed only a
$2.9 billion net decline (current cost, annual rate) over the first
quarter as a whole, considerably less than the $9.6 billion
liquidation assumed by BEA in preparing the advance GDP estimate for
1992:Q1.
With the drop in sales in March, the inventory-sales ratio
for non-auto retailers rose to 1.49 months at the end of March--well
below the elevated level at the end of last year, but still a shade
higher than earlier in 1991.
At a more disaggregated level,
inventory-sales ratios rose for most categories of retail stores.
For all manufacturing and trade, inventories rose at an annual
rate of $36.9 billion in current-cost terms in March, but declined
at a $1.7 billion annual rate for the first quarter as a whole.
Because of the decline in the stock-sales ratio at non-auto
retailers, the ratio of inventories to sales edged down in the first
quarter.
The ratio for wholesalers was little changed from the
relatively high level at the end of last year.
The ratio for
manufacturers also was unchanged, but at a relatively low level.
-3Michigan Index of Consumer Sentiment:
May 15. 1992
According to the University of Michigan Survey Research Center,
the composite index of consumer sentiment increased 2-1/2 index
points in May, the third consecutive monthly increase.
These
preliminary results are based on responses of nearly two-thirds of
the full sample of participants.
The improvement in consumer
attitudes was widespread across a variety of indicators.
Assessments of business conditions over the next 12 months and next
5 years both firmed significantly.
Consumers' appraisals of buying
conditions for large household appliances rose in May to their
highest level since last summer; appraisals of buying conditions for
cars showed an even larger increase in May, reaching the highest
Moreover, the questions relating to consumers'
level in five years.
willingness to use credit and to use saving for major purchases
The only area of pessimism was for
both increased markedly.
Questions for
consumers' appraisals of their financial situation.
both current and expected conditions edged down.
Consumer Sentiment
Index
132
Michigan Survey
- - - - Conference Board Survey
IN
-A 118
104
S-
I'
97
1 / I
JW
S
141
-'
I
I
1981
I
I
1983
-- 55
i
I
I
1985
I
I
1987
i
1989
1991
-4 48
1
I4
-4GROWTH IN SELECTED COMPONENTS OF INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
(Percent change from preceding comparable period)
Proportion
in
total
IP
1991:4
1991 1
1991
1992
Q4
Q1
-Annual rateTotal index
Previous
1992
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
---- Monthly rate-----
100.0
-.5
-. 5
-. 7
-. 7
-2.9
-4.1
.5
.4
.4
.2
.5
4.2
7.7
8.5
1.0
4.4
-3.6
-20.0
-7.2
7.7
-. 4
.6
2.3
5.2
-.2
88.1
54.8
42.1
22.6
3.7
18.9
-1.1
-1.4
-. 9
1.9
3.2
1.7
-. 7
-. 6
-. 3
2.5
-3.1
3.6
-1.6
-1.0
-1.7
-. 3
2.5
-. 7
.3
.2
.2
.2
1.9
-.2
.2
.3
.3
.3
.3
.3
.3
.2
.2
.1
.2
.1
14.5
2.8
3.9
7.8
-2.0
4.2
-8.7
-. 4
-1.8
10.5
-14.6
1.0
-1.5
12.3
-11.0
-1.3
.4
1.2
.8
.0
.5
.9
.6
.3
.4
1.0
,3
.2
4.4
-8.0
-4.1
-10.3
-. 5
-. 2
-. 1
12.7
5.3
-2.7
-6.4
-1.3
-5.2
1.7
1.7
.0
.5
.3
.3
.2
.6
33.3
18.2
9.0
-. 5
-1.8
2.3
-1.0
-. 3
.2
-2.7
-1.7
-2.6
.5
.9
-. 2
.1
.3
.8
.5
.1
.7
Motor vehicles and parts
Utilities
EXCLUDING MOTOR VEHICLES
AND PARTS AND UTILITIES
Total index
Products, total
Final products
Consumer goods
Durables
Nondurables
Business equipment
Office and computing
Industrial
Other
Defense and space equipment
Intermediate products
Construction supplies
Materials
Durables
Nondurables
1. From the final quarter of the previous period to the final quarter of the period
indicated.
CAPACITY UTILIZATION
(Percent of capacity; seasonally adjusted)
1967-90
1988-89
1990
1992
Avg.
High
Sep.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
Total industry
82.2
85.0
83.6
78.3
78.4
78.7
Manufacturing
81.5
85.1
82.8
77.3
77.5
77.7
82.4
81.1
89.0
83.6
85.1
81.8
80.3
76.1
80.5
76.2
80.8
76.4
Primary processing
Advanced processing
RATIO OF INVENTORIES TO SALES
(Current-cost data)
Ratio
Manufacturing
1.9
- 1.7
Total
.Mar.-
1.5
L
1.3
Excluding transportation equipment
I
1980
I
I
1982
I
1984
I
I
1986
I
i
1988
I
I
1990
1992
Ratio
S1.5
Wholesale
Mar.
1.2
1.4
--
1.1
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
1990
Ratio
Ratio
2.7 Retail
2.3 -
1992
1.7
1.5
,
2.1
Excluding auto
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
1990
1.4
1992
-6CHANGES IN MANUFACTURING AND TRADE INVENTORIES
(Billions of dollars at annual rates;
based on seasonally adjusted data)
1991
1992
Q3
Q4
Q1
10.8
1.8
-4.5
-3.3
18.6
9.0
9.6
27.6
26.5
-12.5
20.0
20.1
1.1
19.0
-1.0
-1.0
-4.1
-3.0
6.2
.0
6.1
12.4
20.5
-11.4
16.5
7.2
-8.1
15.3
1992
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
-1.7
-5.6
-11.4
8.7
1.0
3.9
-2.9
-44.3
-32.2
-20.5
4.3
-28.1
-12.1
-15.9
2.2
-9.7
-14.3
8.9
7.6
12.0
-4.3
37.0
25.1
.6
12.9
23.5
11.9
11.5
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
-39.4
-28.0
-15.6
2.4
-26.2
-11.3
-14.8
-5.3
-11.4
-12.7
8.1
-. 6
6.1
-6.7
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
Current-cost basis
Total
Total, excluding retail auto
Manufacturing
Wholesale
Retail
Automotive
Excluding auto
Constant-dollar basis
Total
Total, excluding retail auto
Manufacturing
Wholesale
Retail
Automotive
Excluding auto
INVENTORIES RELATIVE TO SALES 1
(Months supply; based on seasonally adjusted data)
1991
1992
1992
Q3
Q4
Q1
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
1.50
1.47
1.57
1.31
1.57
1.91
1.48
1.51
1.49
1.55
1.36
1.61
1.87
1.54
1.50
1.48
1.55
1.36
1.56
1.84
1.49
1.51
1.50
1.58
1.35
1.56
1.80
1.49
1.49
1.47
1.54
1.36
1.54
1.78
1.47
1.49
1.47
1.53
1.35
1.56
1.84
1.49
Current-cost basis
Total
Total, excluding retail auto
Manufacturing
Wholesale
Retail
Automotive
Excluding auto
1. Ratio of end of period inventories to average monthly sales for the period.
May 15,
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SURVEY RESEARCH CENTER:
1992
SURVEY OF CONSUMER ATTITUDES
(Not seasonally adjusted)
1991
1991
1991
1991
1992
1992
1992
1992
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
Composite of current and expected conditions
83.0
78.3
69.1
68.2
67.5
68.8
76.0
77.2
79.7
Current conditions
93.2
76.4
90.4
70.5
80.3
61.9
78.7
61.5
80.5
59.1
79.7
61.8
84.9
70.3
87.7
70.5
91.0
72.5
104
122
101
125
88
119
88
115
90
119
91
123
93
113
97
129
96
123
99
86
87
70
66
61
67
64
53
63
123
137
152
123
133
146
124
119
143
113
114
141
126
114
163
125
126
153
131
130
162
144
139
165
39
31
47
53
54
62
1992
May
(p)
Indexes of consumer sentiment (Feb. 1966=100)
Expected conditions
Personal financial situation
Now compared with 12 months ago*
Expected in 12 months*
Expected business conditions
Next 12 months*
Next 5 years*
Appraisal of buying conditions
Cars
Large household appliances*
Houses
123
117
155
Willingness to use credit
Willingness to use savings
Average expected increase in prices during
the next 12 months
3.7
4.7
4.6
4.0
3.5
3.5
3.3
3.7
3.1
Average expected increase in prices (per year)
over the next 5 to 10 years
4.7
5.1
5.3
4.8
5.4
4.5
4.6
4.9
5.2
* -- Indicates the question is one of the five equally-weighted components of the index of sentiment.
(p) -- Preliminary
(f) -- Final
Note: Figures on financial, business, and buying conditions are the percent reporting 'good times' (or
'better') minus the percent reporting 'bad times' (or 'worse'), plus 100. Asterisk (*) indicates
the question is one of the five,equally-weighted components of the index of sentiment.
THE FINANCIAL ECONOMY
The May 1992 Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey
on Bank Lending Practices
The May 1992 Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending
Practices posed questions about changes in bank lending standards
and terms and about the demand for bank loans by businesses and
households.
Most domestic banks kept credit standards unchanged over the
last three months.
For large and medium-sized firms, the handful of
banks reporting tighter terms were about offset by those reporting
an easing.
For small firms, however, several banks reported easing
while none tightened.
U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks
reported a slight further tightening on balance, citing
deterioration in actual or expected capital conditions as the reason
for the change.
The domestic banks that tightened standards tended
to cite less favorable outlooks for the economy and specific
industries as the reasons for changing standards.
In contrast to
credit terms, there was some moderate further tightening of loan
terms, on balance, especially price terms like the cost of credit
lines and interest rate spreads over base rates; most of the
tightening was for large and medium-sized firms.
Standards for approval of loan applications for various types
of nonresidential real estate continued to tighten at about the same
pace as recorded in the January survey.
Residential real estate
lending standards were basically unchanged.
Domestic banks reported that business loan demand from larger
corporate borrowers had changed little on balance over the past
three months, but that demand from middle market and small business
borrowers had strengthened noticeably.
Banks that reported weaker
loan demand from their large corporate borrowers indicated that
those customers had opted for nonbank sources of finance, such as
-9capital markets.
Demands for residential mortgages to purchase
houses and for home equity loans were generally stronger.
In
contrast to the January survey, demand for consumer installment
loans strengthened on balance.
Compared with the January survey,
about twice as many domestic banks reported increased willingness to
provide consumer credit.
Lending Standards and Terms
Nonmerger-related C&I loans:
credit standards.
On balance,
the standards used by domestic banks for approving business loans
for nonmerger-related purposes changed little.
Standards for small
businesses were eased somewhat at a small number of domestic banks.
Of the few domestic banks that either raised or lowered their
business lending standards, improvement or deterioration in general
economic conditions and in conditions in specific sectors were often
cited as the reasons.
Changes in actual and prospective capital
conditions were also sometimes cited.
Business lending standards at U.S. branches and agencies of
foreign banks, whose customers tend to be large business borrowers,
were tightened at two banks.
Those banks reported that actual and
prospective capital considerations were the reason for the change.
Nonmerger-related C&I loans:
credit.
price and nonprice terms of
Domestic banks and U.S. branches and agencies of foreign
banks on balance reported some additional tightening of terms on
business loans.
Though credit line sizes were pared somewhat for
large and middle-market firms, no domestic bank reported lowering
and a few reported having raised credit line limits for small firms.
Credit line costs tended to be higher for large and middle-market
firms, a pattern that was particularly evident at large domestic
banks, i.e., those with over $10 billion of assets, and at foreign
banks.
On balance, credit line costs were not raised for smaller
-10firms.
At large domestic banks and at foreign banks, spreads of
loan rates at over base interest rates showed some tendency to have
risen.
There was little evidence of this pattern at the smaller
domestic banks, however.
Loan covenant and collateralization
requirements were basically unchanged over the three months.
Commercial real estate loans:
credit standards.
Standards for
various categories of commercial real estate lending continued to be
raised at about the same pace as in the January survey:
About
10 percent of all banks tightened standards, while hardly any banks
eased them.
Approximately equal numbers of banks reported
tightening standards for loans for construction and land
development, commercial office buildings, industrial structures, and
other nonfarm nonresidential purposes.
Household loans.
On balance, domestic banks reported having
not changed credit standards for approving home purchase loan
applications from individuals.
With regard to banks' willingness to
make general purpose and installment consumer loans, about twice as
many banks registered an increase in their willingness to lend in
May as had so indicated in January.
Overall, about one-fifth of
banks reported increased willingness to make consumer loans.
The Demand for Loans
Business loans.
In contrast to the January finding that the
demand for business loans had weakened, the May survey revealed
that, on balance, loan demand had generally strengthened over the
past three months.
Although loan demand by large corporate
customers was basically unchanged at domestic banks, loan demands by
middle market and small businesses were noticeably stronger.
branches and agencies of foreign banks also reported somewhat
stronger business loan demand.
U.S.
-11In contrast to the January survey that reported reduced
inventory and capital expenditure financing needs, the primary
reason cited for the weakness of loan demand by large firms in the
May survey was their use of nonbank sources of finance.
Banks that
noted stronger business loan demand most often cited increases in
their customers' funding needs for inventories and fixed investment,
regardless of the size of the borrower.
Of the few domestic banks
that reported weaker loan demand by middle market and small
businesses, none cited their customers having turned to nonbank
sources of finance.
Household loans.
On balance, the demand for residential
mortgages rose over the past three months.
While some banks
reported weaker demand for residential mortgages, nearly one-third
of domestic banks reported moderately stronger mortgage demand and
nearly 10 percent reported substantially stronger demand.
The
demand for home equity lines of credit also strengthened
considerably, with about one-third of domestic banks reporting
stronger demand.
In contrast to the January survey finding that the
demand for consumer installment loans had fallen over the prior
three months, the May survey found that demand was generally
stronger.
-12MONETARY AGGREGATES
(based on seasonally adjusted data unless otherwise noted)
1991
19911
1992
Q1
94
1992
Feb
1992
Mar
1992
Apr p
Growth
Q4 91Apr 92p
------------ Percent change at annual rates--------------------1.
2.
3.
Ml
M2
M3
8.0
2.8
1.2
------------
11.0
2.3
1.0
16.5
4.2
2.2
27.2
9.4
7.2
10.3
-0.6
-2.9
5.1
-1.9
-3.4
14.3
2.7
0.7
Levels
bil. $
Apr 92p
Percent change at annual rates----------
Selected components
4.
5.
6.
Ml-A
Currency
Demand deposits
7.
Other checkable deposits
8.
2
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
M2 minus M1
Overnight RPs and Eurodollars, NSA
General purpose and broker/dealer money
market mutual fund shares
Commercial banks
Savings deposits (including HMDAs)
Small time deposits
Thrift institutions
Savings deposits (including MMDAs)
Small time deposits
17. M3 minus M2
3
Large time deposits
4
At commercial banks, net
At thrift institutions
Institution-only money market
mutual fund shares
Term RPs, NSA
Term Eurodollars, NSA
5.6
8.7
14.9
28.1
9.6
6.7
592.8
8.4
3.4
7.4
10.0
7.4
22.2
9.8
45.7
0.9
18.1
7.9
5.8
273.6
311.2
12.4
15.0
19.2
25.5
11.1
2.7
350.2
1.1
-0.6
-0.1
3.1
-4.6
-4.6
2524.8
-7.6
39.9
17.0
-1.6
-53.0
-39.1
71.2
3.9
7.1
13.3
1.1
-6.9
9.3
-16.8
-4.0
3.9
16.0
-8.5
-8.8
10.2
-22.5
0.9
0.9
19.2
-18.9
-4.0
22.4
-24.7
12.3
1.3
22.9
-23.5
-3.0
30.5
-31.6
-18.8
-0.6
11.1
-14.6
-3.7
23.4
-27.9
-12.7
4.6
13.8
-6.7
-12.8
16.1
-39.7
354.2
1269.3
703.3
566.0
826.5
408.1
418.4
-5.6
-5.2
-7.4
-3.5
-14.1
-10.4
710.2
-11.7
-5.1
-31.7
-18.9
-14.4
-36.7
-20.4
-18.2
-29.6
-20.2
-16.3
-33.9
-22.0
-17.2
-45.5
-20.0
-16.0
-36.3
406.1
332.3
73.8
33.4
-21.6
-10.6
37.0
-23.6
-11.5
27.0
-6.5
-28.3
-18.5
26.6
38.6
25.3
-24.4
-33.2
189.2
72.2
56.2
38.2
20.3
6.5
----- Average monthly change in billions of dollars---MEMORANDA:5
24. Managed liabilities at comercial
banks (25+26)
25.
Large time deposits, gross
26. Nondeposit funds
27.
Net due to related foreign
institutions
6
Other
28.
29. U.S. government deposits at commercial
7
banks
-0.6
-0.2
-0.4
6.5
-4.0
10.5
-2.6
-5.7
3.1
2.0
-2.3
4.3
-6.3
-6.8
0.5
-5.4
-7.2
1.8
691.5
399.7
291.8
0.4
-0.9
6.3
4.2
2.0
1.0
-1.1
5.4
2.7
-2.3
4.6
-2.7
49.9
241.9
0.9
-1.5
-8.3
2.3
-1.8
20.0
Amounts shown are from fourth quarter to fourth quarter.
Nontransactions HZ is seasonally adjusted as a whole.
The non-MH component of M3 is seasonally adjusted as a whole.
Net of large denomination time deposits held by money market mutual funds and thrift institutions.
Dollar amounts shown under memoranda are calculated on an end-month-of-quarter basis.
Consists of borrowing from other than commercial barks in the form of federal funds purchased, securities
sold under agreements to repurchase, and other liabilities for borrowed money lincluding borrowing from the
Federal Reserve and unaffiliated foreign banks, loan RPs and other minor itemsJ. Data are partially estimated.
7. Consists of Treasury demand deposits and note balances at commercial banks.
p - preliminary
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
-13COMMERCIAL BANK CREDIT AND SHORT- AND INTERMEDIATE-TERM BUSINESS CREDIT 1
(Percentage change at annual rate, based on seasonally adjusted data)
Category
Dec.
1990
to
Dec.
1991
1991
Q4
1992
Q1
1992
Feb.
1992
Mar.
1992
Apr.
Levels
bil.$
1992
Apr.
Commercial bank credit
1. Total loans
and securities
at banks
2.
Securities
3.
U.S. government
4.
Other
5.
Loans
3.9
7.0
1.9
0.0
2.6
5.2
17.6
24.5
6.0
6.8
8.5
19.9
765.2
23.8
30.3
9.8
8.9
16.2
24.3
588.6
1.7
7.3
-6.1
-0.7
-15.5
6.1
176.7
-0.2
1.1
0.5
-2.4
0.5
-0.1
2,098.5
-2.9
-2.1
-6.2
-8.4
-4.3
-6.1
604.4
2.9
2.4
2.3
4.8
1.0
1.1
880.1
2,863.7
6.
Business
7.
Real estate
8.
Consumer
-3.9
-4.0
-1.2
2.0
-4.6
-2.3
361.4
9.
Security
22.2
36.0
43.3
-48.5
71.6
91.4
65.0
Other
-3.2
6.1
5.1
-10.7
2.5
10.
-11.4
187.6
Short- and intermediate-term business credit
11.
Business loans
net of
bankers acceptances
-2.5
-2.3
Loans at foreign
branches 2
-1.6
34.2
13.
Sum of lines 11 and 12
-2.5
14.
Commercial paper
issued by
nonfinancial firms
15.
16.
12.
17.
18.
-6.3
-8.9
-4.4
-5.6
598.1
-40.9
-81.3
-30.8
0.0
22.8
-1.0
-7.7
-11.9
-5.4
-5.6
620.8
-10.4
-6.3
14.9
13.0
18.9
-5.1
141.2
Sum of lines 13 and 14
-4.0
-2.0
-3.7
-7.3
-0.9
-5.3
762.1
Bankers acceptances, 3
U.S. trade-related
-16.2
-4.2
-22.9
-26.0
-31.0
n.a.
26.45
6.8
5.7
-4.2
-3.1
-0.4
n.a.
307.45
-1.6
0.1
-4.3
-6.6
-1.6
n.a.
1,099.35
Finance company
loans to business 4
Total (sum of
lines 15, 16,
and 17)
1. Average of Wednesdays. Data are adjusted for breaks caused by reclassifications.
2. Loans at foreign branches are loans made to U.S. firms by foreign branches of
domestically chartered banks.
3. Consists of acceptances that finance U.S. imports, U.S. exports, and domestic
shipment and storage of goods. Based on average of data for current and preceding
ends of month.
4. Based on average of data for current and preceding ends of month.
5. March 1992 data.
p--Preliminary.
n.a.--Not available.
-14SELECTED FINANCIAL MARKET QUOTATIONS
(percent)
1989
1992
- - - - - - - -.
-
March
highs
1992
-. - -.-
- - -.-
FOMC
Dec-Jan
Mar 31
Lows
Change from:
-.--
- - - -.--
-- -- - -
Mar 89 Dec-Jan
highs
Lows
May 14
-- --- - ---
FOMC
Mar 31
Short-term rates
2
9.85
3.94
3.94
3.80
-6.05
-0.14
-0.14
9.10
9.11
9.05
4.05
4.17
4.31
3.72
3.76
3.81
3.57
3.69
3.90
-5.53
-5.42
-5.15
-0.15
-0.07
0.09
-0.48
-0.48
-0.41
Commercial paper
1-month
3-month
10.05
10.15
4.28
4.28
4.01
3.94
3.83
3.84
-6.22
-6.31
-0.18
-0.10
-0.45
-0.44
Large negotiable CDs 3
1-month
3-month
6-month
10.07
10.32
10.08
4.16
4.23
4.39
3.95
3.89
3.89
3.72
3.87
-6.35
-6.57
-6.21
-0.23
-0.14
-0.02
-0.44
-0.48
-0.52
1-month
10.19
3-month
10.50
4.13
4.25
3.94
3.88
3.69
3.75
-6.50
-6.75
-0.25
-0.13
-0.44
-0.50
11.50
6.50
6.50
6.50
-5.00
0.00
0.00
U.S. Treasury (constant maturity)
6.17
9.88
3-year
7.54
9.53
10-year
7.96
9.31
30-year
5.05
6.71
7.39
5.72
7.34
7.87
-4.16
-2.19
-1.44
0.67
0.63
0.48
-0.45
-0.20
-0.09
Municipal revenue
(Bond Buyer)
Federal funds
Treasury bills 3
3-month
6-month
1-year
3.75
Eurodollar deposits 4
Bank prime rate
Intermediate- and long-term rates
7.95
6.87
6.53
6.70
-1.25
0.17
-0.17
Corporate--A utility
recently offered
10.47
8.87
8.46
8.69
-1.78
0.23
-0.18
Home mortgage rates
FHLMC 30-yr. FRM
FHLMC 1-yr. ARM
11.22
9.31
8.98
6.19
8.23
5.79
8.75
6.02
-2.47
-3.29
0.52
0.23
-0.23
-0.17
-------------------------
1989
Record
highs
Date
Lows
Jan 3
1992
FOMC
Mar 31 May 14
----------------------.
--------.-------.----------.-------------
Percent change from:
Record
highs
1989
lows
FOMC
Mar 31
-------------------------
Stock prices
Dow-Jones Industrial 3397.58
231.85
NYSE Composite
418.99
AMEX Composite
644.92
NASDAQ (OTC)
4121.28
Wilshire
5/11/92
1/15/92
2/12/92
2/12/92
1/15/92
2144.64 3235.47 3368.88
227.72
154.00 223.25
391.79
305.24 395.04
576.46
378.56 603.77
2718.59 3961.55 4000.16
-0.84
-1.78
-6.49
-10.62
-2.94
57.08
47.87
28.35
52.28
47.14
4.12
2.00
-0.82
-4.52
0.97
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1/ One-day quotes except as noted.
2/ Average for two-week reserve maintenance period
closest to date shown. Last observation is average
for maintenance period ending May 13, 1992.
3/ Secondary market.
4/ Bid rates for Eurodollar
deposits at 11 a.m. London time.
5/ Based on one-day Thursday quotes
and futures market index changes
6/ Quotes for week ending
Friday previous to date shown.
-15-
THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY
Developments in Foreign Industrial Countries
In Japan, the unemployment rate (s.a.) increased slightly to
2.1 percent in March, while the job offers to applicants ratio
(s.a.) declined an additional 0.1 percent, falling 15.6 percent
below its year-earlier level.
Errata
The following are corrections to some of the calculations made
in section IV of Greenbook Part 2:
Page IV-12, first paragraph, last sentence should read
"However, the Nikkei index recovered from its earlier losses and
declined 3-1/2 percent, on balance, during the intermeeting period."
Page IV-12, second complete paragraph, first sentence should
read "In Canada, from March 31, 1992, through May 13, 1992, the call
money rate declined 50 basis points, the three-month rate declined
75 basis points, and the yield on the bellwether bond declined
25 basis points."
Page IV-13, first paragraph, last sentence should read "During
the intermeeting period sterling rose 4-3/4 percent against the
dollar and 3 percent against the mark, stock prices in the United
Kingdom rose 12 percent, and the yield on the bellwether bond
declined 80 basis points."
Page IV-18, third full paragraph, first and second sentences
should be replaced with "Equity prices dropped sharply during April,
but later rebounded, and declined, on balance, by 3-1/2 percent from
March 31 through May 13."
Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (1992, May 18). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19920519_part2
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_19920519_part2,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {1992},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_19920519_part2},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}