speeches · March 29, 2005
Speech
Ben S. Bernanke · Governor
For release on delivery
Noon EST
March 30, 2005
Implementing Monetary Policy
Remarks by
Ben S. Bernanke
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
R.I.S.E. Symposium
Dayton, Ohio
March 30, 2005
Among the most important of my duties at the Federal Reserve is serving on the
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the body that makes U.S. monetary policy.
Nineteen men and women--the seven members of the Board of Governors and the
Presidents of the twelve Reserve Banks--gather in Washington eight times each year to
participate in FOMC deliberations on the course of monetary policy.l If necessary, the
FOMC can also convene by conference call between regularly scheduled meetings. The
FOMC's decisions are guided by the dual mandate given to the Federal Reserve by the
Congress, which enjoins the Committee to use its powers to pursue both price stability
and maximum sustainable employment.
To achieve its mandated objectives, the FOMC must influence the course ofthe
u.s.
economy, helping it to grow rapidly enough to make full use of available resources
but not so rapidly as to stoke inflation. How, specifically, does the Committee exert this
influence? The person in the street might tell you that the Fed "controls interest rates."
That statement is not literally accurate. In fact, the Fed has little or no direct influence
over the interest rates that matter most for the economy, such as mortgage rates, corporate
bond rates, or the rates on Treasury securities. Instead, the Fed affects these key rates, as
well as the prices of financial assets such as stocks, only indirectly. Since many of you
plan to work in the financial markets, I thought that you might find it interesting to hear
some of the details of how U.S. monetary policy is actually implemented and how policy
decisions affect asset prices and yields. I will begin by discussing how the Federal
Reserve influences the federal funds rate, the one market interest rate over which it has
I Though nineteen policymakers participate in FOMe deliberations, only twelve vote at any given meeting.
The seven members of the Board and the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York have a
permanent vote. The remaining eleven Presidents vote on a rotating basis.
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fairly direct control. I will then discuss the effects of changes in the federal funds rate on
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the asset prices and yields that matter the most for economic activity and inflation.
Monetary Policy and the Federal Funds Rate
Broadly speaking, the Federal Open Market Committee's principal task is to
determine the degree of financial stimulus needed to steer the economy onto a desirable
path and then to slet monetary policy so as to provide that amount of stimulus. "Financial
stimulus" is not a precisely measured concept, but in general, financial conditions are
stimulative to the extent that the asset prices and yields prevailing in financial markets
induce households and firms to spend more freely. For example, low mortgage rates
promote increased spending on new homes, low auto-financing rates tend to increase the
sales of new cars, and low corporate bond yields and high stock prices generally induce
firms to invest in new capital goods, such as factories and machines, at a faster pace.
When the economy is growing too sluggishly to fully employ its capital and labor
resources, and if insufficient aggregate demand is the cause of slow growth, increased
financial stimulus can help return the economy to full employment by expanding the
aggregate demand for goods and services. Similarly, if the economy is growing at an
unsustainably qui(;k rate, more-restrictive financial conditions (in the form of higher
mortgage rates, auto financing rates, and corporate bond rates, for example) can help to
restrain spending and reduce the risk of an inflationary overshoot.
Although the FOMC's ultimate objective is to provide the appropriate degree of
financial stimulus to the economy, the Committee has no direct control over the key
interest rates and asset prices that jointly determine the extent of financial stimulus, as I
2 As always, my remarks today reflect my own views and not necessarily those of my Federal Reserve
colleagues. I thank S(:th Carpenter for excellent assistance.
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have already noted. Instead, the FOMC's monetary policy decision is expressed in terms
of the Committee's target value for an otherwise obscure short-term interest rate, the
federal funds rate. For example, the FOMC's current target for the federal funds rate, as
established at its meeting last week, is 2.75 percent.
What is the federal funds rate (often called the funds rate for short)? The funds
rate is the interest rate prevailing in the market for borrowing and lending reserve
balances, also called the federal funds market. Reserve balances are deposits held at the
Federal Reserve by commercial banks and other depository institutions.3 Banks hold
reserve balances at the Fed for several reasons:
First, balances at the Fed can be used to satisfy banks' legal requirement to hold
reserves in proportion to the level of their own customers' transactions deposits (checking
accounts, for example).4 A bank's legal reserve requirement is calculated based on the
average level of deposits held by the bank's own customers over a two-week period,
called the computation period, and must be satisfied by having sufficient reserves on
average over a subsequent two-week period, called the maintenance period.
Second, banks can choose to hold what are called contractual clearing balances.
Unlike balances held at the Fed for reserve purposes, which pay no interest, contractual
clearing balances earn implicit interest in the form of earnings credits. Banks can use
these credits to pay for services provided by the Federal Reserve, such as check clearing
s
and the use ofthe Fedwire, the Federal Reserve's electronic large-value payment system.
3 For convenience, from now on I will refer to banks and other depository institutions collectively as
"banks."
4 Banks' holdings of vault cash also count toward meeting legally required reserves. Reserve requirements
are established by the Federal Reserve's Regulation D.
5 Banks contract with their regional Federal Reserve Banks to hold a specified level of these balances on
average over an ensuing two-week maintenance period. They are free to change their contractual balances
between periods.
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Together, balances held at the Fed to satisfy reserve requirements and contractual
clearing balances are referred to as required balances. Total required balances in recent
years have been around $20 billion, divided roughly equally between required reserves
and contractual clearing balances.6
Banks may also choose to hold balances at the Fed in excess of their required
balances. These so-called excess balances are costly for banks because they earn no
interest and do not satisfy legal reserve requirements. Nevertheless, a bank may hold
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them to facilitate financial transactions with other institutions. Whenever a bank makes
or receives large payments electronically over Fedwire, either as a result of its own
activities or those of its depositors, reserves are shifted out of the account ofthe paying
bank into the reserve account of the receiving bank. Payments made by check also result
in a transfer of reserves between banks. Trillions of dollars of reserves are transferred
between banks every day as a result of these financial settlements, which end each day at
6:30 p.m. ET when the Fed closes its Fedwire system. Payments flows may be
exceptionally large on certain days, such as major tax dates and days on which the
purchases of bonds in Treasury auctions are settled.
In the face oflarge and often unpredictable payments flows, a financially-active
bank must confront the problem of managing its reserve account both to meet its reserve
requirement for the period and also to avoid ending any day with its account at the Fed
overdrawn (which may carry a financial penalty). At the same time, banks try to
6 Strictly speaking, contractual clearing balances are not "reserves" in the legal sense. However, balances
held at the Fed to satisfy a reserve requirement are indistinguishable from contractual clearing balances; for
simplicity, both types of balances are referred to as "reserve balances."
7 The Federal Reserve permits institutions some flexibility to carry forward a limited amount of their
reserve surpluses or deficiencies to the next maintenance period. With this flexibility, some institutions are
able to reduce the average level of their excess balances nearly to zero. But for the system as a whole,
excess balances typically average $1.5 billion to $2 billion. Current data on reserve holdings and other
assets and liabilities of the Federal Reserve are available at www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h4l1current.
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accumulate as few excess reserves as possible, because holding non-interest-paying
excess reserves instead of interest-bearing securities is costly.
A bank that finds itself short of reserve balances on a given day can borrow in the
federal funds market from other institutions that happen to hold more balances at the Fed
than they need on that day. The interest rate that banks pay when they borrow in the
federal funds market is the aforementioned funds rate. Banks generally contract to
borrow fed funds on an unsecured basis and for very short periods, typically overnight.
Loans of fed funds can be made through brokers whose business is to arrange such
s
transactions, or they can be made directly between institutions. Dflate, the daily volume
of overnight fed funds transactions handled by brokers has ranged between $60 billion
and $80 billion, an amount several times greater than the total level of reserves in the
banking system. The volume of direct (that is, non-brokered) transactions is not reported
but is estimated to be of similar magnitude.
The funds rate is a market rate, not an administered rate set by fiat--that is, the
funds rate is the rate needed to achieve equality between the demand for and the supply
of reserves held at the Fed. As I have already discussed, the demand for reserve balances
arises both because banks must hold required reserves and because reserve balances are
useful for facilitating transactions. Because ofthe scale of and volatility in daily
payments flows, the demand for reserve balances can vary substantially from one day to
the next.
The supply of reserve balances is largely determined by the Federal Reserve--at
the operational level, by the specialists at the Federal Reserve's Open Market Desk,
8 Large banks dealing in high volumes of fed funds typically use brokers, whereas a small bank is more
likely to borrow directly from a larger bank with which it has an ongoing relationship.
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located in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in the New York financial district. For
example, to increase the supply of reserves, the Open Market Desk purchases securities
(usually government securities) on the open market, crediting the seller with an increase
in reserve balances on deposit at the Fed in the amount of the purchase.9 Thus, a
purchase of a billion dollars' worth of securities by the Open Market Desk increases the
supply of funds available to lend in the fed funds market by the same amount. Similarly,
sales of securities from the Fed's financial portfolio result in debits against the accounts
of commercial banks with the Fed and thus serve to drain reserve balances from the
system.10 Collectively, these transactions are called open-market operations.
Factors outside the control ofthe Open Market Desk can also affect the supply of
reserve balances. For example, when the Federal Reserve receives an order for currency
from a bank, it debits the reserve account of the bank in payment when the currency is
shipped, thereby reducing reserve supply. When deciding upon open market operations
to control the supply of reserves, the Open Market Desk must take account of these
external factors.
In practice, the Open Market Desk uses several methods of performing open-
market operations. In some cases it purchases securities outright, that is, with the
intention of holding the securities in its portfolio indefinitely. Outright purchases are
used to offset long-lasting changes in factors affecting the demand for and supply of
reserves. For example, long-term increases in the private sector's demand for currency
have largely been met by outright purchases of securities. Over the years, the Fed has
9 If the seller is not a bank, the Fed credits the reserve account of the seller's correspondent bank.
Typically, the counterparties to the Open Market Desk are large private securities dealers, called primary
dealers.
10 Actual sales of securities in the open market have been rare. In practice, when the Fed wishes to drain
reserves, it usually lets some securities mature without replacing them.
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accumulated a portfolio of more than $700 billion of Treasury securities, mostly as an
offset to its issuance of currency. In contrast, in cases in which variations in the demand
for reserves or in external factors affecting reserve supply appear likely to be temporary,
the Desk typically prefers to conduct open-market operations through short-term or long
term repurchase agreements, known as repos. Under a repurchase agreement, the buyer
and seller of a security agree to reverse the transaction after a certain fixed period. Thus,
when the Open Market Desk purchases securities under a repo agreement, the resulting
increase in reserve balances lasts only until the time at which the transaction is reversed.
Over the course of a year, the value of rep os on the Fed's books on any given day may
range from a few billion dollars to $30 billion or more. In the period before the
millennium date change (Y2K), when the demand for currency was temporarily very
high, the daily value of repos peaked at nearly $150 billion.
The manager of the Open Market Desk and his team bear the responsibility of
adjusting the supply of fed funds to maintain the funds rate at or near the target
established by the FOMe. Meeting this objective on a daily basis is technically
challenging. To hit the funds rate target, the Desk staff must forecast the daily demand
for balances as well as changes in external factors affecting reserves supply. Open
market operations are then set in motion to balance the supply of and demand for reserves
at the target funds rate.
Shortly after 9 a.m. each morning, the Desk staff and staff members at the Board
of Governors confer over the phone to discuss their respective estimates of the day's
demand for balances as well as to consider factors that may affect supply. The Desk
manager and his staff also keep in close touch with fed funds brokers and other market
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participants so as to be able to assess general market conditions. The Desk's market
contacts are useful not only for controlling the funds rate but also for obtaining broader
financial-market information for the use of Fed policymakers.
At 9:20 a.m., a conference call is held between the Desk staff, Board staff, and the
President of a Reserve Bank. I I The Desk staff summarize the projections for reserves
demand and supply, report on conditions in the federal funds market and global financial
market developments, and present to the President their plans for open-market operations
for his or her comment. Open-market operations will be arranged shortly after this "call,"
and the results are disclosed to the public generally within a few minutes. The Desk is in
the market on most business days, adding from $2 billion to $10 billion in reserves to
keep the funds rate near the FOMe's target.
As an additional means for managing the fed funds, the Federal Reserve stands
ready to lend reserves to depository institutions that request them. Financially sound
banks are eligible to borrow from the Fed at what is called the primary credit rate, which
to date has been set at 100 basis points (1 percentage point) above the target funds rate.
Historically, reserve shortages occasionally caused the funds rate to "spike" well above
its target, once even hitting 100 percent (in 1991). The primary credit facility is designed
to avoid such spikes by providing an elastic supply of reserves at a rate not far above the
funds rate target. Since the introduction ofthe primary credit facility, the rate has
exceeded the primary credit rate only in a few unusual circumstances, such as the power
outage in the eastern United States in August 2003.
II To be eligible to participate, the President must be a current voting member of the FOMe, other than the
President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
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The Federal Reserve's multiple means of injecting reserves into the banking
system--a belt-and-suspenders approach--was shown in its best light following the
September 11 terrorist attacks. With a significant part of the financial system inoperative
and with many payments not being made as scheduled, the banking system's demand for
reserve balances rose sharply. Those reserve needs were met initially through large
amounts of direct borrowing from the Fed. As market functioning improved, needed
reserves were provided by means of open-market operations. The increase in the supply
of reserves topped $80 billion by the end of the week.
The Funds Rate and Other Market Rates
I have discussed at some length how the Federal Reserve manages the federal
funds rate, the most direct instrument of monetary policy. As I have already hinted,
however, monetary policy is effective only to the extent that Federal Reserve actions can
affect a wide range of interest rates and asset prices. What is the link between the funds
rate and these key financial variables?
The interest rates most closely linked to the funds rate are those prevailing in
short-term money markets. Financial market participants are able to trade short-term
liquid funds in a number of markets, including, for example, the market for repurchase
agreements based on Treasury securities (the repo market). The federal funds market is
tied particularly closely to the so-called Eurodollar market. Technically, Eurodollar
deposits are dollar-denominated deposits held at non-U.S. banks, but regulatory and
technological developments have made these deposits easily tradable even by U.S. banks
and by many nonbank institutions not eligible to participate in the fed funds market.
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Accessible to a wide range of borrowers and lenders and operating virtually around the
clock, the Eurodollar market has grown rapidly and become highly liquid.
Because large banks can trade in either the federal funds market or the Eurodollar
market and because fed funds and Eurodollars are easily substitutable forms in which to
hold short-term liquidity, it should not be surprising that overnight Eurodollar interest
rates line up closely with the funds rate, even within the day (Bartolini, Gudell, Hilton,
and Schwarz, 2005). Were that not the case, then banks could profit by borrowing in the
cheaper market and lending in the market in which the rate is higher. As a consequence
ofthis potential arbitrage, the FOMC's target for the funds rate effectively determines
other very short-term rates as well. This linkage establishes one important connection
between the FOMC's target funds rate and interest rates more broadly.
As I have noted, however, to affect overall financial conditions, the FOMC's
actions must affect not only very short-term rates but also longer-term yields and asset
prices, including mortgage rates, corporate bond rates, and stock prices. Considerable
empirical evidence suggests that monetary-policy actions do affect these longer-term
yields and asset prices as well as very short-term rates.12 But what is the mechanism?
To keep things simple, we can focus on the relationship between the FOMC's
actions and the yield on longer-term Treasury securities, such as five-year or ten-year
Treasury notes. If monetary policy can affect Treasury yields, then clearly it can affect
other yields and asset prices as well. For example, mortgage rates are closely linked to
long-term Treasury yields, the spread between the two rates being explained largely by
factors such as the risk of default on mortgage loans and the so-called prepayment risk
12 See, for example, Bernanke and Kuttner (2004) for evidence that monetary policy actions affect stock
prices. Kuttner (2001) estimates the effects of monetary policy on Treasury yields at different maturities.
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(that is, the risk that homeowners will choose to pay off their mortgages early).
Likewise, changes in Treasury yields affect stock prices by affecting both the profit
prospects of publicly traded companies as well as the rate at which expected future profits
are discounted to the present.
Basic financial theory suggests that any long-term interest rate, such as a five-year
or ten-year Treasury rate, is the sum of two components: a weighted average of expected
short-term interest rates and a term premium, which in turn depends on risk, liquidity,
and other factors affecting the desirability of the financial instrument in question.
Monetary policy probably influences the term premium on Treasury securities to some
extent. 13 However, in all likelihood, the more important means by which monetary
policy affects Treasury yields is through the effect of policy on the expected future path
of short-term interest rates, and I will focus on that channel.
Expected short-term interest rates influence long-term rates because any investor
has the choice of holding either a long-term security or a series of short-term securities,
re-investing his or her funds in a new short-term security as the old short-term security
matures. All else being equal, the choice between the two strategies depends on the
expected return. If, on the one hand, short-term rates are expected to be higher on
average than the long-term rate that spans the same period, investors will choose the
strategy of rolling over short-term securities. If, on the other hand, the long-term rate
exceeds the average of expected future short-term rates, the long-term security will be the
more attractive. Since both short-term and long-term Treasury securities are willingly
held in the marketplace, investors must be roughly indifferent between short-tenn and
13 For example, if monetary policy were such as to create highly volatile inflation, the risk of holding
conventional Treasury securities (as opposed to Treasury securities that are indexed to inflation) would rise,
increasing required compensation for risk and thus the term premium.
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long-tenn securities, implying that (on average and abstracting from any tenn premiums)
expected future short-tenn rates must be similar to the current long-tenn yield.
You may be beginning to understand at this point why making monetary policy is
not a simple matter--and, in particular, why the Fed has only very indirect control over
long-tenn yields and asset prices. The Fed controls very short-tenn interest rates quite
effectively, but the long-tenn rates that really matter for the economy depend not on the
current short-tenn rate but on the whole trajectory of future short-tenn rates expected by
market participants. Thus, to affect long-tenn rates, the FOMe must somehow signal to
the financial markets its plans for setting future short-tenn rates. How can this be done?
The most direct method is through talk. The FOMC's post-meeting statement, the
minutes released three weeks after the meeting, and speeches and congressional
testimony by the Chairman and other Federal Reserve officials all provide information to
the markets and the public about the near-term economic outlook, the risks to that
outlook, and the appropriate course for monetary policy. With the aid of this
information, financial market participants make estimates of the likely future path of
short-term interest rates, which in tum helps them to price longer-term bonds. FOMC
talk probably has the greatest influence on expectations of short-term rates a year or so
into the future, as beyond that point the FOMe has very little, if any, advantage over
market participants in forecasting the economy or even its own policy actions.
Influencing policy expectations for the more distant future may be more difficult.
However, the FOMC has two general ways to help financial market participants divine
the long-run course of policy. First, to the extent practical, the FOMC strives to be
consistent in how it responds to particular configurations of economic conditions and
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transparent in explaining the reasons for its response. By building a consistent track
record, the FOMC increases its own predictability as well as public confidence in its
policies. Second, more generally, comments by FOMC officials about the Committee's
general policy framework, including the Committee's economic objectives and members'
views about the channels of monetary policy transmission and the structure of the
economy, help the public deduce how policy is likely to respond to future economic
circumstances.
Importantly, FOMC members do not have to guess about the effects of their
words and actions on the public's expectations of future policy actions. Information
about those expectations is revealed in a number of ways in financial markets. For
example, market prices on actively-traded futures contracts on the funds rate or on the
Eurodollar rate tell us a great deal about the funds rate that market participants expect to
14
prevail at various dates in the future. Options on fed funds and Eurodollar futures are
also actively traded; the prices of these options provide useful information about the
degree of uncertainty that market participants have about future monetary policy. By
watching financial markets and listening to the views of market participants, FOMC
members are able to know with considerable accuracy what the markets expect for
monetary policy. This information helps Committee members deduce how their own
actions and statements are likely to affect asset prices and yields.
To conclude, the FOMC controls very short-term interest rates fairly directly.
However, as I have emphasized today, the Committee's control over longer-term yields
and over the prices of long-lived financial assets depends crucially on its ability to
14 Gfukaynak, Sack, and Swanson (2002) provide evidence on the predictive power of various futures
contracts for monetary policy. Piazzesi and Swanson (2004) show that more-distant futures prices must be
adjusted for risk in order to provide good policy forecasts.
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influence market expectations about the likely future course of policy. In the past decade
or so, the Federal Reserve has become substantially more transparent and open in its
communication with the public. Growing appreciation ofthe fact that greater openness
makes monetary policy more effective is, I believe, an important reason for this welcome
trend.
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References
Bartolini, Leonardo, Svenja Gudell, Spence Hilton, and Krista Schwarz (2005). "Intra
Day Behavior ofthe Federal Funds Market," Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
working paper (February).
Bernanke, Ben and Kenneth Kuttner (2004). "What Explains the Stock Market's
Reaction to Monetary Policy?," Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2004-16 (March).
GUrkaynak, Refet, Brian Sack, and Eric Swanson (2002). "Market-Based Measures of
Monetary Policy Expectations," Board of Govemors of the Federal Reserve System,
Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2002-40 (September).
Kuttner, Kenneth (2001). "Monetary Policy Surprises and Interest Rates: Evidence from
the Fed Funds Futures Market," Journal o/Monetary Economics, vol. 47, pp. 523-44.
Piazzesi, Monika, and Eric Swanson (2004). "Futures Prices as Risk-Adjusted Forecasts
of Monetary Policy," National Bureau of Economic Research working paper no. 10547
(June).
Cite this document
APA
Ben S. Bernanke (2005, March 29). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20050330_bernanke
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20050330_bernanke,
author = {Ben S. Bernanke},
title = {Speech},
year = {2005},
month = {Mar},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20050330_bernanke},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}