greenbooks · September 15, 2008
Greenbook/Tealbook
Prefatory Note
The attached document represents the most complete and accurate version available
based on original files from the FOMC Secretariat at the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
Please note that some material may have been redacted from this document if that
material was received on a confidential basis. Redacted material is indicated by
occasional gaps in the text or by gray boxes around non-text content. All redacted
passages are exempt from disclosure under applicable provisions of the Freedom of
Information Act.
Content last modified 03/07/2014.
Class III FOMC - Internal (FR)
September 12, 2008
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
Retail Sales.......................................................................................1
Consumer Sentiment........................................................................1
Business Inventories ........................................................................1
Federal Government Budget ............................................................5
Producer Prices ................................................................................5
Exhibits
Retail Sales.......................................................................................2
Reuters/University of Michigan Survey of Consumer Attitudes.....3
Nonfarm Inventory Investment........................................................4
Recent Federal Outlays and Receipts ..............................................6
Recent Changes in Producer Price Indexes .....................................7
The Domestic Financial Economy .............................................................. 8
Exhibits
Commercial Bank Credit .................................................................8
Selected Financial Market Quotations .............................................9
The International Economy ........................................................................ 10
Trade in Goods and Services .........................................................11
Prices of Internationally Traded Goods .........................................13
Exhibits
Trade in Goods and Services .........................................................11
U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services (chart) ................11
U.S. Exports and Imports of Goods and Services..........................12
Prices of U.S. Imports and Exports (chart) ....................................14
Prices of U.S. Imports and Exports (table) ....................................15
ii
Supplemental Notes
The Domestic Nonfinancial Economy
Retail Sales
Total nominal retail sales decreased 0.3 percent in August; sales in the retail control
group of stores fell 0.5 percent following gains in June and July that were revised down.
Although a drop in gasoline prices contributed to the decrease in nominal retail control
spending in August, sales fell back in a number of other categories, especially nonstore
retailers and electronics and appliance stores. Given our projection for consumer prices,
this nominal decline would appear to translate into a further decrease in real PCE control,
albeit not as large as the declines in June and July. Among outlets excluded from the
retail control, sales at building material and supply stores declined last month, but sales at
motor vehicles and parts dealers increased.
Consumer Sentiment
The early September reading for the Reuters/University of Michigan index of consumer
attitudes jumped sharply from the low levels recorded over the past several months, and
inflation expectations fell; declines in gasoline prices likely contributed to both
movements. This month’s preliminary sentiment figure reflected large increases in
nearly all of the components, especially those included in the expected conditions subindex. Among those items not included in the overall index, consumers’ expectations
about the change in unemployment over the next twelve months improved noticeably and
stood at its lowest level in nearly a year. Households’ appraisals of buying conditions for
cars strengthened, apparently in response to the introduction of incentive programs, but
respondents’ attitudes toward purchases of homes worsened. The median of expected
inflation over the next twelve months dropped more than a percentage point, to 3.6
percent, and the median of expected inflation over the next 5 to 10 years moved down to
2.9 percent, about the same as its average over the past five years.
Business Inventories
The book value of retail inventories, excluding motor vehicles and parts, rose at a solid
pace in July. Combined with the inventory figures for manufacturing and wholesale
trade, book-value inventories in the entire manufacturing and trade sector, excluding
motor vehicles and parts, rose at an annual rate of $124 billion in July, a modest step-up
from the second-quarter accumulation. However, because changes in book-value
inventories can be heavily influenced by price changes that lead to revaluation of existing
stocks, these book-value data can differ substantially from real inventory changes. The
-1-
-2-
September 12, 2008
Retail Sales
(Percent change; seasonally adjusted)
2007
Share1
Total retail trade and food services
Previous estimate
Q4
2008
Q1
2008
Q2
June
July
Aug.
100.0
.9
.2
.0
.9
1.0
.1
.3
-.5
-.1
-.3
Auto and other motor vehicle dealers
Building material and supply stores
16.0
7.2
-1.2
-1.7
-2.6
-2.4
-6.1
3.0
-3.0
-.6
-4.6
.3
2.0
-2.2
Retail control
Previous estimate
76.8
1.6
1.1
.9
2.4
2.5
.8
1.0
.3
.4
-.5
13.3
13.1
10.1
11.6
7.0
5.4
5.0
2.4
2.5
1.7
4.6
.4
1.5
.9
9.3
1.1
-.1
-.9
-2.3
1.9
1.4
-1.5
1.0
1.3
.3
4.3
.6
1.2
.8
-2.1
-.8
-1.2
.3
2.4
1.7
1.8
5.1
4.2
1.3
1.1
-.7
2.3
2.2
1.3
.4
1.1
.2
3.2
.5
.8
-.1
-2.0
-1.1
.8
1.3
.2
.4
.4
.2
.8
.1
.4
-.4
.0
-1.5
.8
-.2
.7
.2
-2.5
-2.3
.2
-.3
.0
-1.3
.9
-.4
82.3
65.2
1.3
.5
.9
.6
.2
2.5
1.9
2.0
.7
.4
.5
.3
.3
.3
-.7
-.2
.1
-.1
1.2
1.2
-.6
-.4
-.8
-.8
n.a.
General merchandise
Food and beverage stores
Food services
Gasoline stations
Nonstore retailers2
Health & personal care
Clothing and accessories
Furniture and home furnishing
Electronics and appliances
Auto parts, acc. and tire stores
Other retailers3
Other aggregates of retail sales:
Total excluding motor vehicles and parts
Retail control ex. gasoline station sales
Previous estimate
Memo: Real PCE control 4
Previous estimate
1. Share of total retail trade and food services for August.
2. Includes electronic shopping and mail order houses, direct selling establishments, and vending
machine operators.
3. Includes miscellaneous retailers and sporting goods, hobby, book, and music stores.
4. PCE control is a BEA measure and has approximately the same coverage as retail control. Revisions
to real PCE control are a staff translation based on the revisions to retail control.
Source: Census Bureau.
Nominal Retail Control and Real PCE Control
Percent change
2.5
2.5
2.0
Nominal retail control
Real PCE control
2.0
1.5
1.5
1.0
1.0
.5
.5
.0
.0
-.5
Aug. -.5
July
-1.0
-1.5
-1.0
2004
2005
2006
2007
Note. Real PCE control estimates for June and July 2008 are a staff translation based on the revisions to retail control.
Source: Census Bureau.
2008
-1.5
-3-
September 12, 2008
Reuters/University of Michigan Survey of Consumers
Indexes of consumer sentiment
(Not seasonally adjusted)
2008
Feb.
Mar.
Apr. May
June
July
Aug.
Sept.P
Composite of current and expected conditions1
Current conditions1
Expected conditions1
70.8
83.8
62.4
69.5
84.2
60.1
62.6
77.0
53.3
59.8
73.3
51.1
56.4
67.6
49.2
61.2
73.1
53.5
63.0
71.0
57.9
73.1
76.5
70.9
Personal financial situation
Now compared with 12 months ago2
Expected in 12 months2
94
112
93
112
86
100
80
98
69
96
73
105
72
105
87
123
54
83
46
81
40
71
36
68
38
59
42
65
52
72
75
86
Appraisal of buying conditions
Cars
Large household appliances2
Houses
119
123
140
114
124
129
110
112
136
96
109
130
91
104
133
103
115
138
103
110
146
114
110
137
Expected unemployment change - next 12 months
141
148
154
153
159
154
150
137
Prob. household will lose a job - next 5 years
24
22
23
22
25
20
22
19
Expected inflation - next 12 months
Mean
Median
3.9
3.6
4.6
4.3
5.7
4.8
7.0
5.2
6.5
5.1
6.3
5.1
5.3
4.8
3.9
3.6
Expected inflation - next 5 to 10 years
Mean
Median
3.4
3.0
3.2
2.9
3.5
3.2
4.0
3.4
4.0
3.4
3.5
3.2
3.9
3.2
3.1
2.9
Category
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.
Consumer sentiment
1966 = 100
120
1985 = 100
160
140
Expected inflation
(Reuters/University of Michigan)
6
Percent
6
5
5
110
Reuters/Michigan (right scale)
100
120
90
4
4
Median, 5 to 10 years ahead
P
100
80
Sep.
Sept.P
80
Sept.
Sep.
3
3
2
2
70
60
60
40
Conference Board (left scale)
2002
P Preliminary.
2004
2006
Aug.
2008
50
40
Median, 12 months ahead
1
0
1
2002
P Preliminary.
2004
2006
2008
0
-4-
Nonfarm Inventory Investment
(Billions of dollars; seasonally adjusted annual rate)
2007
Measure and sector
2008
Q4
Q1
Q2
May
June
July
-20.6
-21.3
.7
-17.9
-15.3
-2.6
-52.9
-10.2
-42.7
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
Manufacturing and trade ex. wholesale
and retail motor vehicles and parts
Manufacturing
Wholesale trade ex. motor vehicles & parts
Retail trade ex. motor vehicles & parts
6.1
2.9
-3.3
6.5
5.6
13.7
.0
-8.2
-22.6
-24.5
4.9
-2.9
-36.2
-23.5
2.2
-14.9
-12.9 e
-7.5e
4.1 e
-9.4 e
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
Book-value inventory investment
(current dollars)
Manufacturing and trade ex. wholesale
and retail motor vehicles and parts
Manufacturing
Wholesale trade ex. motor vehicles & parts
Retail trade ex. motor vehicles & parts
70.4
34.7
23.0
12.7
95.8
60.5
39.0
-3.7
97.5
39.3
48.5
9.6
78.1
38.3
45.9
-6.1
136.2
81.6
42.8
11.8
Real inventory investment
(chained 2000 dollars)
Total nonfarm business
Motor vehicles
Nonfarm ex. motor vehicles
124.4
31.0
62.1
31.3
n.a. Not available.
e Staff estimate of real inventory investment based on revised book-value data.
Source. For real inventory investment, BEA; for book-value data, Census Bureau.
ISM Customers’ Inventories:
Manufacturing
Inventory Ratios ex. Motor Vehicles
Months
1.9
1.8
1.9
Index
60
1.8
Staff flow-of-goods system
55
1.7
Aug.
1.6
1.5
1.5
1.4
1.4
1.3
1.3
1.2
1.2
Census book-value data
1.1
Aug.
1.7
1.6
2000
2000
2002
2002
2004
2004
60
55
50
50
45
45
40
40
July
2006
2006
2008
2008
Note. Flow-of-goods system covers total industry ex.
motor vehicles and parts, and inventories are relative
to consumption. Census data cover manufacturing and
trade ex. motor vehicles and parts, and inventories are
relative to sales.
1.1
35
2000
2000
2002
2002
2004
2004
2006
2006
2008
2008
Note. A number above 50 indicates inventories are "too high."
Source. Manufacturing ISM Report on Business.
35
-5-
ratio of book-value inventories to sales (excluding motor vehicles) held steady at 1.16 in
July.
Federal Government Budget
According to the Monthly Treasury Statement, the federal government recorded a deficit
(adjusted for routine payment timing shifts and financial transactions) in August of
$91 billion—wider than in the same month last year and a little above our expectation.
The adjusted deficit for the 12 months ending in August was $403 billion, more than
$210 billion larger than it was in the same year-earlier period.
Receipts in August were almost 6 percent below their level a year earlier, probably
reflecting the slowing pace of economic activity. Individual income and payroll tax
revenues, which made up the bulk of receipts in August, were 4 percent below their yearearlier level. The small amount of corporate tax payments typically made in August was
also lower than its level a year earlier.
Outlays in August were up 5 percent from their year-earlier level, which left the
cumulative increase in spending for the 12 months ending in August a little slower than
the brisk pace in the preceding 12 months. Defense spending in August was almost
7 percent above its year-earlier level and was in line with the staff’s expectation.
Producer Prices
The producer price index for finished goods declined 0.9 percent in August reflecting a
sizable drop in energy prices. The PPI for finished food rose 0.3 percent, and excluding
food and energy, the PPI for finished goods rose a modest 0.2 percent last month.
However, prices for capital goods other than motor vehicles and high-tech equipment
posted another large increase. In addition, cost pressures continued to be evident at
earlier stages of processing. The PPI for intermediate materials excluding food and
energy rose 1.7 percent in August following increases of 1.2 percent and 2 percent in
June and July, respectively. Last month’s price increases were again concentrated in
chemicals, plastics, and other energy-intensive materials.
The Domestic Financial Economy
-6-
Federal Government Budget
(Unified basis; adjusted for payment-timing shifts and financial
transactions; data from Monthly Treasury Statement)
Surplus or Deficit (-)
Billions of dollars
300
300
12-month moving sum
200
200
100
100
0
0
-100
-100
-200
-200
-300
-300
-400
-500
-400
Aug.
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
Outlays and Receipts
2006
2007
2008
-500
2009
Percent change from year earlier
20
20
Receipts
12-month moving sum
15
15
10
10
5
5
Outlays
Aug.
0
0
-5
-5
-10
-10
-15
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
-15
2009
Recent Federal Outlays and Receipts
(Billions of dollars except as noted)
August
12 months ending in August
2007
2008
Percent
change
Outlays
Net interest
National defense
Major transfers1
Other
235.8
22.8
48.9
124.2
39.9
247.8
25.1
52.1
134.3
36.2
5.1
10.2
6.7
8.1
-9.3
2,750.3
238.0
557.7
1,509.1
445.5
2,939.4
247.9
615.2
1,633.9
442.4
6.9
4.2
10.3
8.3
-.7
Receipts
Individual income and payroll taxes
Corporate income taxes
Other
166.5
141.1
4.3
21.1
157.0
135.3
3.9
17.8
-5.7
-4.1
-9.7
-15.7
2,565.6
1,975.5
379.4
210.7
2,536.8
1,985.7
327.4
223.7
-1.1
.5
-13.7
6.1
Surplus or deficit (-)
Memo:
Unadjusted surplus or deficit (-)
-69.2
-90.8
...
-184.6
-402.7
...
-117.0
-111.9
...
-218.2
-370.5
...
Function or source
1. Includes Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and income security programs.
... Not applicable.
2007
2008
Percent
change
-7-
September 12, 2008
Recent Changes in Producer Price Indexes
(Percent change)
12-month change2
Product
Weights1
Aug.
2007
Aug.
2008
3-month change
May
2008
Aug.
2008
Annual rate
PPI finished goods
2008
May
June
July
Aug.
Monthly rate
100.0
2.3
9.6
10.8
8.6
1.4
1.8
1.2
-.9
Food
21.3
5.1
9.1
8.5
8.8
.7
1.5
.3
.3
Energy
Gasoline
Fuel oil
Residential natural gas
Residential electricity
Other energy
21.7
7.4
1.0
3.0
7.4
2.9
.4
-5.1
-6.4
-.2
3.4
-2.3
27.4
43.1
64.1
25.4
6.2
45.1
32.6
23.9
118.0
70.6
11.9
49.8
18.1
21.3
3.1
47.2
11.8
2.9
4.8
9.3
8.0
4.0
.8
3.1
6.0
9.0
12.4
6.6
.8
7.5
3.1
-.2
3.7
8.8
2.0
7.2
-4.6
-3.5
-13.6
-5.0
.1
-12.6
Finished goods ex. food and energy
Consumer goods ex. food and energy
Nondurables ex. food and energy
Apparel
Tobacco products
Other nondurables
57.0
35.3
21.2
1.5
3.4
16.3
2.2
2.5
3.2
.8
6.1
3.3
3.6
3.9
5.6
1.3
4.8
6.2
3.9
4.2
6.0
1.9
9.9
5.7
4.6
4.6
6.0
2.4
.3
7.5
.3
.4
.8
.0
2.3
.5
.2
.3
.3
-.1
.0
.4
.7
.6
.6
.3
.0
.7
.2
.2
.6
.4
.1
.7
14.1
2.1
3.0
9.1
1.6
.7
3.1
1.5
2.0
2.7
-2.8
3.2
1.7
-3.1
-.3
3.6
3.2
14.0
-11.0
5.6
-.1
-1.3
-.7
.3
.3
2.2
-1.8
.5
.6
1.4
.8
.4
-.1
-.3
-1.9
.4
21.7
1.3
2.3
.9
.1
1.6
15.5
1.8
.7
3.1
5.3
-23.7
.4
2.5
3.2
2.7
-2.8
2.3
-17.1
2.1
4.4
2.9
-3.1
-.3
1.3
-17.2
1.2
4.3
4.8
14.0
-11.0
2.7
-11.1
1.5
7.1
.1
-1.3
-.7
.1
.2
.3
.4
.3
2.2
-1.8
-.1
-.2
-.2
.5
.8
1.4
.8
.9
-1.5
.5
.8
.1
-.3
-1.9
-.2
-1.2
.1
.5
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
3.7
2.9
.1
1.0
3.2
1.5
.9
3.1
4.6
1.8
2.4
-1.6
.2
.2
.6
.0
.2
.1
.1
.2
.2
.3
.2
-.7
Intermediate materials ex. food and energy
Materials for nondurable manufacturing
Materials for durable manufacturing
Components for manufacturing
Other intermediate materials
72.7
15.2
8.6
15.1
33.7
1.6
3.9
2.7
.6
.7
12.5
31.8
14.8
4.1
7.4
17.9
28.2
46.7
4.4
12.9
21.7
68.3
15.1
8.3
10.5
1.5
2.4
3.5
.5
1.0
1.3
2.7
1.7
.4
.8
2.0
5.4
1.5
1.1
.9
1.7
5.2
.4
.5
.7
Crude food materials
Crude energy
Other crude materials
32.8
50.9
16.4
23.9
-7.7
13.5
15.3
59.1
33.2
9.7
216.2
89.5
-7.1
-32.1
5.2
.6
12.5
2.7
3.5
5.4
-.2
.1
6.9
3.4
-5.2
-19.4
-1.9
Durables
Passenger cars
Light trucks
Other durables
Capital equipment
Passenger cars
Light trucks
Heavy trucks
Computers
Communication equipment
Other capital equipment
Memo:
Physicians3
Hospitals3
Applications software
1. Relative importance weights for December 2007, which are based on 2002 shipment levels.
2. Not seasonally adjusted.
3. Seasonally adjusted by FRB staff.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics.
-8-
Commercial Bank Credit
(Percent change, annual rate, except as noted; seasonally adjusted)
Type of credit
Level1
Aug. 2008
H1
2007
H2
2007
Q1
2008
Q2
2008
July
2008
Aug.
2008
6.2
11.3
6.0
3.6
1.9
5.3
9,060
Total
Loans2
Total
To businesses
Commercial and industrial
Commercial real estate
7.2
11.5
9.5
4.4
.9
5.4
6,848
6.9
6.2
26.2
10.3
15.5
9.9
13.0
10.2
5.8
-9.2
-.1
4.7
1,511
1,657
To households
Residential real estate
Revolving home equity
Other
Consumer
Originated3
Other4
8.8
3.0
10.7
2.9
3.1
9.6
-1.1
6.5
-3.7
10.8
9.2
19.9
3.4
11.5
.7
8.8
8.2
12.1
3.3
16.1
-1.3
6.0
6.9
-16.2
-5.6
12.1
-12.3
11.0
5.9
14.3
9.3
6.0
10.4
8.3
2.2
5.6
1,856
522
1,335
842
1,251
982
3.3
-5.0
14.5
10.7
-4.3
28.9
-4.2
-11.2
3.0
.9
8.4
-6.6
4.9
15.4
-6.2
5.0
42.8
-36.1
2,212
1,187
1,025
Securities
Total
Treasury and agency
Other5
Note. Yearly annual rates are Q4 to Q4; quarterly and monthly annual rates use corresponding average levels. Data
have been adjusted to remove the effects of mark-to-market accounting rules (FIN 39 and FAS 115), the initial consolidation of
certain variable interest entities (FIN 46), the initial adoption of fair value accounting (FAS 159), and the effects of sizable
thrift-to-bank and bank-to-thrift structure activity in October 2006, March 2007, and October 2007. Data also account for
breaks caused by reclassifications.
1. Billions of dollars. Pro rata averages of weekly (Wednesday) levels.
2. Excludes interbank loans.
3. Includes an estimate of outstanding loans securitized by commercial banks.
4. Includes security loans and loans to farmers, state and local governments, and all others not elsewhere classified.
Also includes lease financing receivables.
5. 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.
Source. Federal Reserve.
C&I Loan Rate Spreads
Return on Assets at Commercial Banks
Basis points
Percent
240
Quarterly
220
2.0
Quarterly, s.a.a.r.
25 largest banks
All other banks
1.5
Weighted
average
Q3
200
1.0
180
Q2
160
Weighted
average
adjusted*
0.5
Q3
140
0.0
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
Note. Spreads over market interest rate on an instrument of
comparable maturity on loans less than $25 million (2006$).
*Adjusted for changes in nonprice loan characteristics.
Source. Survey of Terms of Business Lending.
1992
1996
Source. Call Report.
2000
2004
2008
-9-
III-T-1
Selected Financial Market Quotations
(One-day quotes in percent except as noted)
2007
Change to Sept. 11 from
selected dates (percentage points)
2008
Instrument
Aug. 6
June 24
Aug. 4
Sept. 11
2007
Aug. 6
2008
June 24
2008
Aug. 4
5.25
2.00
2.00
2.00
-3.25
.00
.00
4.74
4.72
1.80
2.20
1.72
1.93
1.58
1.81
-3.16
-2.91
-.22
-.39
-.14
-.12
Commercial paper (A1/P1 rates)2
1-month
3-month
5.26
5.29
2.36
2.78
2.41
2.72
2.30
2.67
-2.96
-2.62
-.06
-.11
-.11
-.05
Large negotiable CDs1
3-month
6-month
5.34
5.27
2.80
3.17
2.80
3.10
2.80
3.08
-2.54
-2.19
.00
-.09
.00
-.02
Eurodollar deposits3
1-month
3-month
5.33
5.35
2.70
3.00
2.60
3.00
2.60
3.00
-2.73
-2.35
-.10
.00
.00
.00
Bank prime rate
8.25
5.00
5.00
5.00
-3.25
.00
.00
Intermediate- and long-term
U.S. Treasury4
2-year
5-year
10-year
4.49
4.52
4.82
2.80
3.55
4.29
2.49
3.25
4.15
2.17
2.86
3.81
-2.32
-1.66
-1.01
-.63
-.69
-.48
-.32
-.39
-.34
U.S. Treasury indexed notes5
5-year
10-year
2.43
2.48
1.10
1.76
1.15
1.71
1.25
1.66
-1.18
-.82
.15
-.10
.10
-.05
Municipal general obligations (Bond Buyer)6
4.51
4.76
4.74
4.54
.03
-.22
-.20
Private instruments
10-year swap
10-year FNMA7
10-year AA8
10-year BBB8
10-year high yield8
5.44
5.34
6.12
6.57
9.21
4.84
4.98
6.54
7.00
10.13
4.66
4.82
6.62
7.17
10.57
4.22
4.28
6.48
7.10
10.63
-1.22
-1.06
.36
.53
1.42
-.62
-.70
-.06
.10
.50
-.44
-.54
-.14
-.07
.06
Home mortgages (FHLMC survey rate)
30-year fixed
1-year adjustable
6.59
5.65
6.45
5.27
6.52
5.22
5.93
5.21
-.66
-.44
-.52
-.06
-.59
-.01
Short-term
FOMC intended federal funds rate
Treasury bills1
3-month
6-month
Record high
Change to Sept. 11
from selected dates (percent)
2008
Stock exchange index
Dow Jones Industrial
S&P 500 Composite
Nasdaq
Russell 2000
Wilshire 5000
Level
Date
June 24
Aug. 4
Sept. 11
Record
high
2008
June 24
2008
Aug. 4
14,165
1,565
5,049
856
15,807
10-9-07
10-9-07
3-10-00
7-13-07
10-9-07
11,807
1,314
2,368
708
13,421
11,284
1,249
2,286
704
12,738
11,434
1,249
2,258
719
12,716
-19.28
-20.20
-55.27
-15.98
-19.56
-3.17
-4.96
-4.65
1.57
-5.26
1.33
.00
-1.20
2.11
-.18
1. Secondary market.
2. Financial commercial paper.
3. Bid rates for Eurodollar deposits collected around 9:30 a.m. eastern time.
4. Derived from a smoothed Treasury yield curve estimated using off-the-run securities.
5. Derived from a smoothed Treasury yield curve estimated using all outstanding securities and adjusted for the carry effect.
6. Most recent Thursday quote.
7. Constant-maturity yields estimated from Fannie Mae domestic noncallable coupon securities.
8. Derived from smoothed corporate yield curves estimated using Merrill Lynch bond data.
_______________________________________________________________________
NOTES:
August 6, 2007, is the day before the August 2007 FOMC meeting.
June 24, 2008, is the day before the June 2008 FOMC monetary policy announcement.
August 4, 2008, is the day before the most recent FOMC monetary policy announcement.
_______________________________________________________________________
-10-
The International Economy
Trade in Goods and Services
The U.S. international trade deficit widened to $62.2 billion in July, as a large increase in
imports of goods and services more than offset a strong increase in exports.
In July, exports rose 3.3 percent, supported by a surge in exports of automotive products.
Exports of consumer goods, industrial supplies, capital goods, and services also increased
briskly. In contrast, agricultural products fell back after jumping up in June.
The value of imports of goods and services surged 3.9 percent in July, led by a strong
increase in imports of oil (both on account of higher volumes as well as an increase in
price). Imports of industrial supplies, capital goods, and services also increased. In
contrast, imports of automotive products and consumer goods edged down.
Revisions to previously published data led to a slight downward revision to nominal
export growth in first half of the 2008, primarily due to lower exports of services, and a
slight upward revision to nominal import growth over the same period.
-11-
-12-
-13-
Prices of Internationally Traded Goods
Non-oil imports. In August, prices of core imports rose just 0.2 percent, down sharply
from increases near 1 percent in previous months. Much of the deceleration reflected
slower rates of increase for prices of material-intensive imports, consistent with the
recent easing of many primary commodity prices. Prices of imported finished goods also
slowed noticeably in August to a monthly rate of only 0.1 percent. Relative to the second
quarter, core import prices for the July-August period were up 6.8 percent at an annual
rate, marking a noticeable step-down from the previous two quarters. Price increases for
material-intensive goods accounted for the lion’s share of the July-August increase,
although finished goods prices also contributed.
Oil. The BLS price index for imported oil declined 12.8 percent in August, reflecting the
steep fall in spot oil prices since mid-July. The spot price of West Texas intermediate
crude oil averaged $117 per barrel in August and has continued to decline and closed at
$100.68 on September 11.
Exports. Core export prices declined 2 percent in August, the first monthly decline in
nearly two years. The fall in core export prices was entirely attributable to a drop in
prices for material-intensive goods; agricultural export prices fell 9.6 percent and those
for nonagricultural industrial supplies fell 2.5 percent. In contrast, prices for exported
finished goods rose 0.2 percent in August, similar to recent rates of increase. The
average price of core exports in July and August rose at an annual rate of 7.6 percent
from the second quarter, down from double-digit rates of increase in the first half of the
year.
-14-
-15-
Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (2008, September 15). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_20080916_part1
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_20080916_part1,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {2008},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_20080916_part1},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}