greenbooks · September 15, 2003
Greenbook/Tealbook
Prefatory Note
The attached document represents the most complete and accurate version available
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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Please note that some material may have been redacted from this document if that
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1
In some cases, original copies needed to be photocopied before being scanned into electronic
format. All scanned images were deskewed (to remove the effects of printer- and scanner-introduced
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2
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Content last modified 5/20/2009.
Confidential (FR) Class III FOMC
September 12, 2003
CURRENT ECONOMIC
AND FINANCIAL CONDITIONS
Supplemental Notes
Prepared for the Federal Open Market Committee
by the staff of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Contents
The Domestic Nonfinancial Economy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Personal Income and Consumer Spending . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Producer Prices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Tables
Retail Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
University of Michigan Survey Research Center:
Survey of Consumer Attitudes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Recent Changes in Producer Prices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Recent Changes in Producer Prices –
Relative Contribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
The Domestic Financial Economy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Tables
Commercial Bank Credit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Selected Financial Market Quotations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
The International Economy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Trade in Goods and Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Prices of Internationally Traded Goods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Non-oil imports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Oil
........................................9
Exports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Tables
Net Trade in Goods and Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
U.S. Exports and Imports of Goods and Services . . . . . . 11
Prices of U.S. Imports and Exports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Charts
U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services . . . . . . . 10
Oil Prices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Supplemental Notes
The Domestic Nonfinancial Economy
Personal Income and Consumer Spending
Total nominal retail sales rose 0.6 percent in August after having surged
1.3 percent in July. Sales rose 0.5 percent at motor vehicles and parts dealers
but fell a touch at building material and supply stores. Nominal sales in the
retail control group of stores, which excludes those outlets, advanced 0.8 percent
in August. In addition, the increases in the retail control category in June and
July were revised up slightly to 1 percent and 0.9 percent, respectively. These
data are broadly consistent with the current-quarter estimate for real purchases
of goods excluding cars and trucks that we wrote down in the September
Greenbook.
The increase in nominal sales within the retail control category in August was
fairly broad-based. Sales at general merchandise stores, electronics and
appliance outlets, gasoline stations, and food services posted strong gains. The
only downturns were recorded at clothing and accessories stores and at nonstore
retailers (which include electronic shopping and mail order houses).
According to the preliminary report, the Michigan Survey Research Center’s
(SRC) index of consumer sentiment ticked down about 1 point in early
September relative to August’s final report. The SRC index has been relatively
flat since June and stands well above its March low.
Both the current and expected conditions components of the overall index
slipped in early September. For current conditions, consumers’ assessments of
buying conditions for large household appliances and of their current personal
finances both dipped. For expected conditions, a drop in expected business
conditions over the next twelve months was only partly offset by an
improvement in consumers’ appraisals of their expected personal finances.
Among those items not included in the overall index, expectations about the
change in unemployment over the next twelve months deteriorated slightly,
partly reversing their improvement in August. Assessments of buying
conditions for houses dropped to their lowest level since March while appraisals
of buying conditions for cars were unchanged.
In early September, the mean of expected inflation over the next twelve months
jumped to 3.6 percent, and the median rose to 2.9 percent after having increased
noticeably in August. Both measures are at their highest levels since March. In
contrast, the mean of expected inflation over the next five to ten years slid to
2.8 percent while the median edged down to 2.6 percent, its lowest level since
last September.
-2September 12, 2003
Retail Sales
(Percent change; seasonally adjusted)
2002
Q4
Total retail trade and food services
Previous estimate
Retail control1
Previous estimate
Furniture and home furnishing
Electronics and appliances
Clothing and accessories
General merchandise
Food and beverage stores
Gasoline stations
Health & personal care
Nonstore retailers2
Other retailers3
Food services
Other aggregates of retail sales:
Total excluding motor vehicles
Previous estimate
GAF 4
Previous estimate
Building material and supply stores
Motor vehicles and parts
2003
Q1
2003
Q2
June
July
Aug.
.5
1.4
1.4
1.3
.9
.9
1.3
1.4
.6
1.1
1.9
.1
.1
1.0
.8
.9
.8
.8
1.3
1.4
2.7
1.0
.3
-1.0
-1.0
.3
1.0
2.1
4.7
3.5
.5
.7
.2
1.3
1.5
1.2
.8
1.0
.5
1.6
1.2
1.3
.8
.7
1.4
-1.4
1.1
.4
3.1
.7
2.2
-1.0
7.6
1.6
2.5
-.8
-6.4
1.3
-1.7
.7
1.2
1.3
1.5
.6
1.8
1.1
.0
-.3
2.7
.3
-.5
.8
1.1
2.3
2.3
.6
.5
1.4
1.1
1.7
.5
.4
1.2
1.0
1.0
.8
.7
1.3
.2
1.3
1.1
1.2
.7
1.1
.8
.6
1.2
-1.6
-.3
.4
3.5
4.3
2.6
.1
1.6
2.4
-.2
.5
1. Total retail trade and food services sales less sales at building material and supply stores
and automobile and other motor vehicle dealers.
2. Includes electronic shopping and mail order houses.
3. Includes miscellaneous retailers and sporting goods, hobby, book, and music stores.
4. Comprises furniture and home furnishings, electronics and appliances, computers, clothing
and accessories, sporting goods, hobby, book, music, and general merchandise.
-3September 12, 2003
University of Michigan Survey Research Center: Survey of Consumer Attitudes
Indexes of consumer sentiment
(Not seasonally adjusted)
2003
Category
Feb.
Mar.
Apr. May
June
July
Aug. Sept.P
Composite of current and expected conditions1
Current conditions1
Expected conditions1
79.9
95.4
69.9
77.6
90.0
69.6
86.0
96.4
79.3
92.1
93.2
91.4
89.7
94.7
86.4
90.9
102.1
83.7
89.3
99.7
82.5
88.2
98.9
81.3
102
127
96
128
111
131
97
138
102
136
110
135
109
124
108
130
66
86
63
87
87
99
120
110
111
100
106
95
111
97
100
96
Appraisal of buying conditions
Cars
Large household appliances2
Houses
140
145
165
141
136
153
149
139
157
160
144
175
157
143
166
160
155
169
150
150
165
150
148
155
Expected unemployment change - next 12 months
130
130
120
107
115
116
111
114
Prob. household will lose a job - next 5 years
26
24
25
26
25
24
24
26
Expected inflation - next 12 months
Mean
Median
3.2
2.7
3.8
3.1
2.7
2.4
2.5
2.0
2.5
2.1
2.3
1.7
2.8
2.5
3.6
2.9
Expected inflation - next 5 to 10 years
Mean
Median
3.1
2.7
2.9
2.8
3.1
2.7
3.1
2.8
3.0
2.7
3.2
2.7
3.0
2.7
2.8
2.6
Personal financial situation
Now compared with 12 months ago2
Expected in 12 months2
Expected business conditions
Next 12 months2
Next 5 years2
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. Expected change in unemployment
is the fraction expecting unemployment to rise minus the fraction expecting unemployment to fall, plus 100.
P Preliminary.
1. Feb. 1966 = 100.
2. Indicates the question is one of the five equally-weighted components of the index of sentiment.
-4-
Producer Prices
The producer price index for finished goods rose 0.4 percent in August, led by
an increase of 0.7 percent in food prices and a rise of 1.2 percent in energy
prices. Excluding food and energy, the finished-goods PPI edged up 0.1 percent
last month following July’s rise of 0.2 percent. August’s increase in the core
was about in line with our expectations and left core PPI inflation at 0.4 percent
on a twelve-month change basis, up 0.8 percentage point from a year earlier.
Last month’s increase in the PPI for energy reflected a jump of 6.3 percent in
gasoline prices as well as smaller gains in fuel oil and electricity prices; by
contrast, natural gas prices fell 1.5 percent.1 Over the year ending in August, the
PPI for energy rose more than 14 percent compared with a year-earlier decline
of 5-1/2 percent.
The August rise in food prices came on the heels of a small decline in July; large
increases in prices for fresh fruit and vegetables and for beef and veal
contributed importantly to last month’s jump. Over the twelve months ending in
August, the PPI for food rose 5 percent after having fallen 2.3 percent over the
year-earlier period.
Prices for consumer goods excluding food and energy ticked up 0.1 percent last
month and were essentially unchanged relative to a year earlier. The PPI for
capital equipment edged up 0.1 percent as well, with increases in car and light
truck prices largely offsetting a decline in prices of communications equipment.
After having fallen 1 percent between August 2001 and August 2002, prices for
capital goods rose 0.8 percent over the twelve months ending in August 2003,
reflecting an acceleration in prices in most categories.
At earlier stages of processing, the PPI for core intermediate materials edged up
0.1 percent in August and was up 1.8 percent from a year earlier. Prices of core
crude material prices jumped 3.7 percent, boosted by large increases in scrap
metal prices; core crude prices were up 8.3 percent relative to a year earlier.
1. Based on daily data on rack prices for gasoline, we expect to see a decline in the PPI for
gasoline in September.
-5Recent Changes in Producer Prices
(Percent change; based on seasonally adjusted data)1
12-month change3
Weights2
Product
2003
Aug. 2002 Aug. 2003
2003
Q1
Q2
June
July
Annual rate
Finished goods
Consumer foods
Consumer energy
Other finished goods
Consumer goods
Capital equipment
Aug.
Monthly rate
100.0
20.7
15.0
64.4
37.7
26.7
-1.5
-2.3
-5.5
-.4
.0
-1.0
3.4
5.0
14.2
.4
.1
.8
16.8
10.1
96.8
3.5
4.1
2.9
-5.9
5.1
-27.8
-2.4
-3.0
-1.7
.5
.4
3.4
-.1
-.1
-.1
.1
-.2
.3
.2
.1
.4
.4
.7
1.2
.1
.1
.1
Intermediate materials4
Excluding food and energy
96.0
79.5
-.9
.2
4.3
1.8
24.0
6.0
-10.6
-.9
.5
.0
.1
-.1
.6
.1
Crude food materials
Crude energy
Other crude materials
38.7
41.0
20.3
-8.6
-1.8
9.0
11.8
38.2
8.3
18.0
579.5
19.0
10.1
-61.3
-9.4
-.5
10.7
.6
-3.0
-4.4
.8
3.7
-7.4
3.7
1. Changes are from final month of preceding period to final month of period indicated.
2. Relative importance weights for December 2002, which are based on 1997 shipment levels.
Years prior to 2002 are based on 1992 shipment weights.
3. Not seasonally adjusted.
4. Excludes materials for food manufacturing and animal feeds.
Recent Changes in Producer Prices -- Relative Contribution1
(Percent change; based on seasonally adjusted data)2
12-month change4
Product
Weights3
Aug. 2002 Aug. 2003
2003
Q1
2003
Q2
June
Annual rate
Finished goods
Consumer foods
Consumer energy
Other finished goods
Consumer goods
Capital equipment
100.0
20.7
15.0
64.4
37.7
26.7
-1.5
-.5
-.9
-.3
.0
-.3
3.4
1.0
2.1
.3
.0
.2
16.8
2.0
11.5
2.3
1.5
.8
July
Aug.
Monthly rate
-5.9
1.0
-5.2
-1.5
-1.1
-.4
.5
.1
.5
-.1
-.0
-.0
1. Data may not add due to rounding.
2. Changes are from final month of preceding period to final month of period indicated.
3. Relative importance weights for December 2002, which are based on 1997 shipment levels.
Years prior to 2002 are based on 1992 shipment weights.
4. Not seasonally adjusted.
.1
-.0
.0
.1
.0
.1
.4
.1
.2
.1
.0
.0
-6Commercial Bank Credit
(Percent change, annual rate, except as noted; seasonally adjusted)
Type of credit
Total
1. Adjusted1
2. Reported
3.
4.
5.
6.
Securities
Adjusted1
Reported
Treasury and agency
Other2
Loans3
7. Total
8.
Business
9.
Real estate
10.
Home equity
11.
Other
12.
13.
14.
Consumer
Adjusted4
Other5
Level,
Apr. 2003p
($ billions)
Q4
2002
Q1
2003
Feb.
2003
Mar.
2003
Apr.p
7.1
7.1
12.4
11.8
7.4
8.1
13.9
15.3
7.0
6.0
8.0
4.4
5,834
6,017
13.3
12.7
19.2
4.4
16.1
13.5
25.2
-2.6
11.9
14.0
17.1
9.5
26.3
29.8
30.3
29.1
11.1
7.3
11.2
1.4
14.3
1.5
26.7
-36.6
1,575
1,757
1,081
677
5.0
-6.9
13.1
36.7
10.8
11.1
-4.0
20.4
24.7
19.9
5.8
-5.9
13.4
26.2
11.9
9.4
-9.7
17.9
25.4
17.1
5.5
-8.7
7.3
38.3
3.6
5.7
-2.5
7.9
19.9
6.4
4,259
944
2,103
233
1,870
5.5
4.1
1.4
8.6
4.9
8.5
4.2
7.7
.3
2.2
7.4
17.8
-6.1
.5
33.4
-3.7
-.3
20.2
589
950
623
2002
2003
Note. All data are adjusted for breaks caused by reclassifications. Monthly levels are pro rata averages of weekly (Wednesday)
levels. Quarterly levels (not shown) are simple averages of monthly levels. Annual levels (not shown) are levels for the fourth
quarter. Growth rates are percentage changes in consecutive levels, annualized but not compounded. The conversion from a thrift
to a commercial bank charter added approximately $37 billion to the assets and liabilities of domestically chartered commercial
banks in the week ending May 8, 2002.
1. Adjusted to remove effects of mark-to-market accounting rules (FIN 39 and FIN 115).
2. Includes private mortgage-backed securities, securities of corporations, state and local governments, and foreign governments
and any trading account assets that are not Treasury or agency securities, including revaluation gains on derivative contracts.
3. Excludes interbank loans.
4. Includes an estimate of outstanding loans securitized by commercial banks.
5. Includes security loans and loans to farmers, state and local governments, and all others not elsewhere classified. Also includes
lease financing receivables.
p Preliminary.
-7-
III-T-1
Selected Financial Market Quotations
(One-day quotes in percent except as noted)
2001
Change to Sept. 11 from
selected dates (percentage points)
2003
Instrument
Sept. 10
May 5
Aug. 11
Sept. 11
2001
Sept. 10
2003
May 5
2003
Aug. 11
Short-term
FOMC intended federal funds rate
3.50
1.25
1.00
1.00
-2.50
-.25
.00
Treasury bills 1
3-month
6-month
3.19
3.13
1.11
1.14
0.94
1.04
0.94
1.00
-2.25
-2.13
-.17
-.14
.00
-.04
Commercial paper (A1/P1 rates)
1-month
3-month
3.42
3.24
1.21
1.20
1.04
1.04
1.02
1.04
-2.40
-2.20
-.19
-.16
-.02
.00
Large negotiable CDs 1
1-month
3-month
6-month
3.46
3.26
3.24
1.26
1.24
1.22
1.07
1.07
1.12
1.07
1.08
1.12
-2.39
-2.18
-2.12
-.19
-.16
-.10
.00
.01
.00
Eurodollar deposits 2
1-month
3-month
3.41
3.26
1.25
1.21
1.05
1.07
1.06
1.06
-2.35
-2.20
-.19
-.15
.01
-.01
Bank prime rate
6.50
4.25
4.00
4.00
-2.50
-.25
.00
Intermediate- and long-term
U.S. Treasury3
2-year
10-year
30-year
3.59
5.14
5.55
1.56
4.09
4.97
1.83
4.56
5.46
1.71
4.51
5.36
-1.88
-.63
-.19
.15
.42
.39
-.12
-.05
-.10
U.S. Treasury 10-year indexed note
3.28
2.18
2.31
2.23
-1.05
.05
-.08
Municipal revenue (Bond Buyer) 4
5.25
5.09
5.42
5.32
.07
.23
-.10
5.62
5.68
6.30
7.11
12.72
4.29
4.39
4.83
5.84
9.54
4.80
4.96
5.24
6.17
9.69
4.77
4.89
5.22
6.11
9.05
-.85
-.79
-1.08
-1.00
-3.67
.48
.50
.39
.27
-.49
-.03
-.07
-.02
-.06
-.64
6.89
5.64
5.70
3.74
6.34
3.80
6.44
3.98
-.45
-1.66
.74
.24
.10
.18
Private instruments
10-year swap
10-year FNMA5
10-year AA 6
10-year BBB 6
High-yield 7
Home mortgages (FHLMC survey rate) 8
30-year fixed
1-year adjustable
Record high
Change to Sept. 11
from selected dates (percent)
2003
Stock exchange index
Dow-Jones Industrial
S&P 500 Composite
Nasdaq (OTC)
Russell 2000
Wilshire 5000
Level
Date
May 5
Aug. 11
Sept. 11
Record
high
2003
May 5
2003
Aug. 11
11,723
1,527
5,049
606
14,752
1-14-00
3-24-00
3-10-00
3-9-00
3-24-00
8,532
927
1,504
410
8,817
9,217
981
1,662
459
9,431
9,460
1,016
1,846
507
9,853
-19.31
-33.46
-63.43
-16.28
-33.21
10.88
9.70
22.74
23.82
11.75
2.63
3.65
11.11
10.49
4.47
1. Secondary market.
2. Bid rates for eurodollar deposits collected around 9:30 a.m. Eastern time.
3. Derived from a smoothed Treasury yield curve estimated using off-the-run securities.
4. Most recent Thursday quote.
5. Constant maturity yields estimated from Fannie Mae domestic non-callable coupon securities.
6. Derived from smoothed corporate yield curves estimated using Merrill Lynch bond data.
7. Merrill Lynch Master II high-yield bond.
8. For week ending Friday previous to date shown.
_______________________________________________________________________
NOTES:
September 10, 2001 is the day before the terrorist attacks.
May 5, 2003 is the day before the May FOMC meeting.
August 11, 2003 is the day before the most recent FOMC meeting.
_______________________________________________________________________
-8-
The International Economy
Trade in Goods and Services
The U.S. international trade deficit in July was $40.3 billion, which was about
the same as in June but smaller than recorded during the previous three months
(revised).
The value of exports of goods and services rose 2.0 percent in July, a third
consecutive month of solid increases in both goods and services. Within goods,
the largest increases were in agricultural products, aircraft, and automotive
products. Exports of computers and semiconductors also rose, but other capital
goods declined. In July, services receipts were boosted by increases in travel
and passenger fares, continuing the rebound from the lows associated with
SARS and the Iraq war. With the release of July data, the monthly value of
services receipts was revised down in the first six months of the year by an
average of about $200 million per month. As a result, nominal services receipts
fell 6½ percent (a.r.) in the first quarter of 2003, almost twice as much as
previously published. In the second quarter, services receipts, which previously
remained flat, edged down ½ percent (a.r.).
Nominal imports of goods and services rose 1.6 percent in July, reflecting a
moderate rise in goods imports and a continuing rebound in services payments
(largely from travel and passenger fares). The increase in imported goods in
July was the largest rise since March, with consumer goods, oil, and industrial
supplies accounting for most of the increase. The monthly value of services
payments was revised beginning in January 2003. The first quarter was revised
down and the second quarter was revised up. As a result, nominal services
payments rose 3 percent (a.r.) in the first quarter, less than half the growth rate
published before the revision. In the second quarter, services payments declined
-9-
1¾ percent (a.r.), compared with the previously published decline of nearly
6 percent (a.r.).
Prices of Internationally Traded Goods
Non-oil imports. In August, the prices of U.S. imports of non-oil goods and of
core goods both fell 0.2 percent, following revised July growth rates of 0.0 and
0.1 percent, respectively. Within core goods, the largest price changes were in
industrial supplies and foods, feeds and beverages. After a 0.9 percent increase
in July, prices of foods, feeds and beverages fell 0.4 percent in August, led by
lower prices for vegetables. The 0.6 percent decline in the price of industrial
supplies was the result of a lower price for natural gas, which offset increases in
metals, building materials, and paper. In other major trade categories within
core goods, prices generally edged down, with the exception of automotive
products which rose slightly. The prices of U.S. imports of computers continued
to decline in August, and semiconductor prices also fell.
Oil. The BLS price of imported oil rose 3.9 percent in August, following a
revised 4.5 percent increase in July. The spot price of West Texas Intermediate
(WTI) crude oil was also higher in August, averaging $31.60 per barrel, up
about 80 cents from July. Thus far in September, the spot price has fallen,
closing at $28.83 per barrel on September 11. The recent decline may reflect
the lack of supply disruptions from tropical storms and heightened market
concern about expected increases in non-OPEC oil supply. However, prices
remain elevated, relative to historical norms, owing to the slow return of Iraqi
exports and low global oil inventories.
Exports. In August, for the second consecutive month, the prices of U.S.
exports of total goods and of core goods both fell 0.1 percent. Falling prices of
agricultural products, particularly soybeans and corn, were responsible for much
of the August decline. However, from the first week of August when the BLS
collected their price data to the end of the month, the spot prices of soybeans
and corn each rose about 9 percent. Export prices also moved down slightly for
consumer goods but edged upward for industrial supplies. The prices of U.S.
exports of computers fell 0.5 percent; prices of semiconductors were unchanged.
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Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (2003, September 15). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_20030916_part2
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_20030916_part2,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {2003},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_20030916_part2},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}