greenbooks · April 28, 2009
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 04/01/2015.
Confidential (FR) Class III FOMC
April 24, 2009
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
Sales of New and Existing Homes...................................................1
Orders and Shipments of Nondefense Capital Goods......................1
Correction to Part 1..........................................................................2
Exhibits
Private Housing Activity..................................................................3
Indicators of Single-Family Housing...............................................4
Orders and Shipments of Nondefense Capital Goods......................5
The Domestic Financial Economy ...........................................................2
Exhibits
Commercial Bank Credit .................................................................6
Selected Financial Market Quotations .............................................7
ii
Supplemental Notes
The Domestic Nonfinancial Economy
Sales of New and Existing Homes
The recent data on both new and existing home sales are consistent with the tentative
signs of stabilization in the housing market. Sales of new homes held about flat in March
at a February level that was revised up noticeably. The stock of unsold new homes
continued to fall in March and reached its lowest level since 2001, though, with sales still
at a depressed level, months’ supply remained extremely elevated. Sales of existing
single-family home sales edged down 3 percent in March, retracing much of February’s
increase. These sales have now fluctuated for several months at a level a touch above
4 million units.
Orders and Shipments of Nondefense Capital Goods
Shipments of nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft fell 1.7 percent in March,
resuming a downward trajectory after being flat in February. New orders increased 1.5
percent last month after a rise of 4.3 percent in February.1 These gains offset only part of
the sharp drop in new bookings that occurred in January. With these data, the level of
orders remains well below shipments, which points to further declines in shipments in
coming months.
Within the high-tech category, orders and shipments of computers and peripherals
dropped in March. Shipments of communications equipment fell for the fourth
consecutive month, but orders recovered further in March after the plunge around the turn
of the year. Outside of the high-tech sector, shipments fell steeply last month, and orders
increased less in March than they were revised down in February.
The three-month moving average of the staff’s constructed series on real adjusted durable
goods orders was down 1.5 percent in March, continuing to reflect the plunge of orders
early this year. This series—which strips out nondefense aircraft, defense capital goods,
and industries for which reported orders actually equal shipments—is one of the staff’s
indicators of near-term industrial production.
1
The February increase in new orders is now shown to have been 3 percentage points less than
previously reported. This revision continues the string of large downward revisions seen since the middle
of last year.
-1-
-2-
Correction to Part 1
In the table that appears on page 13 of Part 1 of the Greenbook, two lines were
inadvertently mislabeled. Specifically, the results reported as based on commercial loan
credit standards from the Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey are in fact based on the
change in bank credit standards from the survey; the results reported for the change in
bank credit standards are in fact based on commercial loan credit standards.
The Domestic Financial Economy
-3-
Private Housing Activity
(Millions of units, seasonally adjusted; annual rate except as noted)
2008
2009
Sector
2008
All units
Starts
Permits
Single-family units
Starts
Permits
Adjusted permits1
Permit backlog2
New homes
Sales
Months’ supply3
Existing homes
Sales
Months’ supply3
Multifamily units
Starts
Permits
Permit backlog2
Mobile homes
Shipments
Condos and co-ops
Existing home sales
Q3
Q4
Q1
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
.91
.89
.88
.87
.66
.63
.52
.54
.49
.53
.57
.56
.51
.52
.62
.57
.58
.068
.60
.56
.57
.082
.46
.42
.43
.068
.36
.36
.38
.060
.36
.34
.35
.064
.36
.39
.40
.062
.36
.36
.38
.060
.49
10.65
.46
10.64
.39
11.33
.35
11.26
.33
12.29
.36
10.99
.36
10.48
4.35
9.98
4.43
9.56
4.23
9.79
4.12
9.81
4.05
9.98
4.22
9.64
4.10
9.79
.284
.323
.053
.273
.308
.062
.198
.215
.053
.166
.174
.050
.132
.195
.055
.214
.174
.052
.152
.152
.050
.082
.080
.066
.054
.051
.563
.573
.506
.440
.490
n.a.
.467
n.a.
.470
1. Adjusted permits equal permit issuance plus total starts outside of permit-issuing areas.
2. Number outstanding at end of period. Excludes permits that have expired or have been canceled,
abandoned, or revoked. Not at an annual rate.
3. At current sales rate; expressed as the ratio of seasonally adjusted inventories to seasonally adjusted
sales. Quarterly and annual figures are averages of monthly figures.
n.a. Not available.
Source: Census Bureau.
Private Housing Starts and Permits
(Seasonally adjusted annual rate)
Millions of units
2.0
2.0
1.8
1.8
Single-family starts
1.6
1.6
1.4
1.4
1.2
1.2
Single-family adjusted permits
1.0
1.0
.8
.8
.6
.6
.4
Mar.
.2
.0
Multifamily starts
1999
2000
2001
2002
Mar.
2003
2004
2005
2006
Note: Adjusted permits equal permit issuance plus total starts outside of permit-issuing areas.
Source: Census Bureau.
2007
2008
2009
.4
.2
.0
-4-
Indicators of Single-Family Housing
Inventories of New Homes
and Months’ Supply
New Single-Family Home Sales
1.6
1.4
Millions of units
(annual rate)
Millions of units
(annual rate)
Total (left scale)
0.6
0.5
600
Thousands of units
Months
550
Mar.
500
1.2
0.4
450
Inventories of new homes
(left scale)
1.0
0.3
0.8
Large homebuilders
(right scale)
0.2
0.6
0.2
0.1
Mar.
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Source: For total, Census Bureau; for large homebuilders,
National Association of Home Builders.
350
0.0
250
200
6.5
6.0
Index (2001=100)
Existing home sales
(left scale)
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Note: Months’ supply is calculated using the 3-month moving
average of sales.
Source: Census Bureau.
Mortgage Rates
Existing Single-Family Home Sales
Millions of units
(annual rate)
Mar.
Months’ supply (right scale)
300
Mar.
0.4
400
140
130
Percent
7.5
7.0
5.0
110
Pending home sales
(right scale)
90
4.5
Feb.
4.0
3.5
100
Mar.
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Source: National Association of Realtors.
6.5
6.5
6.0
6.0
5.5
5.5
80
70
60
5.0
4.5
Percent change from year earlier
15
15
60
10
10
5
5
0
0
20
-5
0
Feb.
-10
-20
-25
-30
4.5
House Price Expectations
80
-15
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Note: The April reading is a 2-week moving average of data
available through Apr. 22, 2009. FRM is a fixed-rate mortgage.
Source: Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation.
20
-5
5.0
Apr.
Prices of Existing Homes
20
7.5
7.0
30-year conforming FRM
120
5.5
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
-10
Feb.
Monthly FHFA purchase-only index
Jan.
LP price index
20-city S&P/Case-Shiller monthly price index
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Source: For FHFA, Federal Housing Finance Agency;
for S&P/Case-Shiller, Standard & Poor’s; for LP,
LoanPerformance, a division of First American CoreLogic.
-15
Diffusion index
80
60
Apr. (p)
40
40
5 years ahead
20
0
Apr. (p)
-20
1 year ahead
-20
-40
-40
-25
-60
-60
-30
-80
-20
2007
2008
2009
-80
Note: Diffusion index is constructed by subtracting
expectations of decrease from expectations of increase.
p Preliminary.
Source: Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers.
-5-
Orders and Shipments of Nondefense Capital Goods
(Percent change; seasonally adjusted current dollars)
2008
Category
2009
Q4
Q1
Jan.
Annual rate
Feb.
Mar.
Monthly rate
Shipments
Excluding aircraft
Computers and peripherals
Communications equipment
All other categories1
-19.8
-15.5
-25.3
-16.6
-14.4
-27.5
-34.9
1.6
-50.2
-36.0
-6.6
-9.4
-2.0
-10.4
-9.9
-3.0
.1
1.7
-3.2
.2
-.9
-1.7
-1.4
-2.3
-1.7
Orders
Excluding aircraft
Computers and peripherals
Communications equipment
All other categories1
-49.9
-36.5
-20.8
-28.7
-38.4
-46.9
-41.7
-15.0
-63.0
-41.4
-9.9
-12.3
-9.9
-20.3
-11.7
4.9
4.3
11.9
5.6
3.4
1.9
1.5
-2.0
2.3
1.9
Memo:
Shipments of complete aircraft2
26.0
n.a.
50.5
30.3
n.a.
1. Excludes most terrestrial transportation equipment.
2. From Census Bureau, Current Industrial Reports; billions of dollars, annual rate.
n.a. Not available.
Source: Census Bureau.
Communications Equipment
20
17
14
Non-High-Tech,
Nontransportation Equipment
Billions of chained (2000) dollars, ratio scale
Shipments
Orders
20
17
14
11
11
8
8
5
Mar.
5
59
Billions of chained (2000) dollars, ratio scale
52
2000 2001 2002
2002 2003 2004
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
2008 2009
2000
Note: Shipments and orders are deflated by a price index
that is derived from the quality-adjusted price indexes of the
Bureau of Economic Analysis and uses the producer price
index for communications equipment for monthly interpolation.
Source: Census Bureau.
2
47
47
42
32
Computers and Peripherals
240
210
190
2000 = 100
52
Orders
42
Shipments
37
2
59
Mar.
2000 2001 2002
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
2006 2007 2008 2009
2000
Note: Shipments and orders are deflated by the staff
price indexes for the individual equipment types included
in this category. Indexes are derived from the quality-adjusted
price indexes of the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Source: Census Bureau.
37
32
Medium and Heavy Trucks
Billions of chained (2000) dollars
24
1240
21
19
Thousands of units, ratio scale
1240
17
960
820
680
150
15
540
540
130
13
400
400
170
110
Industrial production
(left scale)
Mar.
Real M3
shipments
(right scale)
90
11
260
960
820
680
Net new orders
of class 5-8 trucks
Sales of class 4-8 trucks
260
9
Mar.
70
2000 2001 2002
2002 2003 2004
2004 2005 2006
2006 2007 2008
2008 2009
2000
Note: Ratio scales. Shipments are deflated by the staff
price index for computers and peripheral equipment, which
is derived from the quality-adjusted price indexes of the
Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Source: Census Bureau; FRB Industrial Production.
7
120
2000 2001 2002
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
2006 2007 2008 2009
2000
120
Note: Annual rate, FRB seasonals.
Source: For sales, Ward’s Communications; for orders, ACT Research.
-6-
Commercial Bank Credit
(Percent change, annual rate, except as noted; seasonally adjusted)
Type of credit
Total
Level1
Apr. 2009e
2007
2008
H2
2008
Q4
2008
Q1
2009
Mar.
2009
Apr.
2009e
10.9
4.4
4.7
6.2
-6.7
-3.8
-14.8
9,325
Loans2
Total
To businesses
Commercial and industrial
Commercial real estate
11.3
4.4
2.6
3.1
-6.4
-7.2
-11.9
7,023
19.0
10.7
14.2
6.4
13.0
2.9
18.3
2.0
-9.7
-1.0
-13.0
-1.7
-18.3
-2.4
1,520
1,723
To households
Residential real estate
Revolving home equity
Closed-end mortgages
Consumer
Originated3
Other
6.8
6.4
6.9
6.6
6.0
17.1
-2.3
12.9
-7.1
7.9
6.4
-1.6
-3.8
12.9
-9.5
7.4
4.7
-4.5
-.7
13.1
-5.8
6.0
3.3
-13.7
-.5
8.3
-4.0
7.3
1.9
-36.7
2.5
8.6
.0
-10.0
-7.3
-29.1
-7.5
1.8
-11.3
-15.5
-5.1
-27.2
2,091
602
1,489
881
1,296
808
9.5
-5.6
31.1
4.6
19.4
-10.7
11.2
37.7
-16.8
16.0
51.6
-24.7
-7.8
3.1
-22.8
6.7
7.4
5.7
-23.5
-35.2
-6.3
2,303
1,354
949
Securities
Total
Treasury and agency
Other4
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), and the initial adoption of fair value accounting. Data also account for the effects of nonbank structure
activity of $5 billion or more.
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 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.
e Estimated.
Source: Federal Reserve.
-7III-T-1
Selected Financial Market Quotations
(One-day quotes in percent except as noted)
2007
Change to Apr. 23 from
selected dates (percentage points)
2009
Instrument
Aug. 6
Jan. 27
Mar. 17
Apr. 23
2007
Aug. 6
2009
Jan. 27
2009
Mar. 17
5.25
.13
.13
.13
-5.12
.00
.00
4.74
4.72
.13
.32
.24
.44
.10
.30
-4.64
-4.42
-.03
-.02
-.14
-.14
Commercial paper (A1/P1 rates)2
1-month
3-month
5.26
5.29
.29
2.04
.44
.66
.30
.40
-4.96
-4.89
.01
-1.64
-.14
-.26
Large negotiable CDs1
3-month
6-month
5.34
5.27
1.08
1.57
1.08
1.83
.87
1.48
-4.47
-3.79
-.21
-.09
-.21
-.35
Eurodollar deposits3
1-month
3-month
5.33
5.35
.75
1.75
1.00
1.65
.90
1.50
-4.43
-3.85
.15
-.25
-.10
-.15
Bank prime rate
8.25
3.25
3.25
3.25
-5.00
.00
.00
Intermediate- and long-term
U.S. Treasury4
2-year
5-year
10-year
4.49
4.52
4.82
.68
1.74
3.17
1.04
2.14
3.47
.90
1.98
3.30
-3.59
-2.54
-1.52
.22
.24
.13
-.14
-.16
-.17
U.S. Treasury indexed notes5
5-year
10-year
2.43
2.48
1.84
1.97
2.04
2.26
1.55
1.92
-.88
-.56
-.29
-.05
-.49
-.34
Municipal general obligations (Bond Buyer)6
4.51
5.13
5.03
4.57
.06
-.56
-.46
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
2.84
3.65
6.03
8.94
14.68
3.14
4.04
6.99
9.25
16.41
3.11
3.82
6.31
8.57
14.01
-2.33
-1.52
.19
2.00
4.80
.27
.17
.28
-.37
-.67
-.03
-.22
-.68
-.68
-2.40
Home mortgages (FHLMC survey rate)
30-year fixed
1-year adjustable
6.59
5.65
5.10
4.90
4.98
4.91
4.80
4.82
-1.79
-.83
-.30
-.08
-.18
-.09
Short-term
FOMC intended federal funds rate
Treasury bills1
3-month
6-month
Record high
Change to Apr. 23
from selected dates (percent)
2009
Stock exchange index
Dow Jones Industrial
S&P 500 Composite
Nasdaq
Russell 2000
D.J. Total Stock Index
Level
Date
Jan. 27
Mar. 17
Apr. 23
Record
high
2009
Jan. 27
2009
Mar. 17
14,165
1,565
5,049
856
15,807
10-9-07
10-9-07
3-10-00
7-13-07
10-9-07
8,175
846
1,505
456
8,524
7,396
778
1,462
404
7,878
7,957
852
1,652
467
8,701
-43.82
-45.57
-67.27
-45.47
-44.95
-2.66
.73
9.79
2.42
2.07
7.59
9.48
13.00
15.62
10.45
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.
January 27, 2009, is the day before the January 2009 FOMC monetary policy announcement.
March 17, 2009, is the day before the most recent FOMC monetary policy announcement.
________________________________________________________________________
Cite this document
APA
Federal Reserve (2009, April 28). Greenbook/Tealbook. Greenbooks, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_20090429_part2
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_greenbook_20090429_part2,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Greenbook/Tealbook},
year = {2009},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Greenbooks, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/greenbook_20090429_part2},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}