CHAPTER 4 Narrative
CHAPTER 4 Narrative
CHAPTER 4 Narrative
Federal Reserve
also called “Fed”
is the CENTRAL BANK of the United STATES.
Founded by the Congress under the Federal Reserved Act of 1913.
It’s original duties were to provide the nation with a safer, more flexible, and more stable
monetary and financial system.
Discount Window- the facility through which Federal Reserve Banks issues loans to
depository institutions.
2. Supervision and Regulation- Federal Reserve Banks have supervisory and regulatory
authority over the activities of banks located in their district.
3. Consumer protection and community affairs-Federal Reserve Banks write regulations
to implement many of the major consumer protection laws and establish programs to
promote community development and fair and impartial access to credit.
4. Government Services-Federal Reserve Banks serves as the COMMERCIAL BANK for
the U.S. Treasury
5. New Currency Issue-Federal Reserve Banks are responsible for the collection and
replacement of damaged currency from circulation.
6. Check Clearing-Federal Reserve Banks process, route, and transfer funds from one bank
to another as checks clear through the Federal Reserve System.
7. Wire transfer services-Federal Reserve Banks and their member banks are linked
electronically through the Federal Reserve Communications System.
8. Research services-Each Federal Reserve Banks has a staff of professional economists who
gather, analyze and interpret economic data and developments in the banking sector in their
district and economywide.
Chapter 4: The Federal Reserve System, Monetary Policy and Interest Rates
Reserves
Depository institutions’ vault cash plus reserves deposited at the Federal Banks
Monetary Base
Currency in circulation and reserves (depository institution reserves and vault cash
of commercial banks) held by the Federal Reserve.
Reserve Deposits
The largest liability on the Federal Reserve’s Balance Sheet.
Reserve accounts also influence the size of money supply.
Two (2) Categories of TOTAL RESERVES
1. Required Reserves- Reserves the Federal Reserve requires banks to hold.
2. Excess Reserves- Additional reserves banks chose to hold.
Fed Fund’s Interest Rate
The interest rate on short-term funds transferred between financial institutions,
usually for a period of one day.
Federal Reserve Board Training Desk
Unit of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York through which open market
operations are conducted.
Policy Directive
Statement sent to the Federal Reserve Board Training Desk from the FOMC that
specifies the money supply target.
2. Discount Rate- is the second monetary policy tool or instrument used by the Federal
Reserve to control the level of bank reserves (and thus the money supply or interest
rates)
Chapter 4: The Federal Reserve System, Monetary Policy and Interest Rates
It is also the rate of interest Federal Reserve Banks charge on loans and to
financial institution in their district.
Is like a signal of the FOMC’s intentions regarding the tenor of monetary
Policy.
Lowering the discount rates signals a desire to see more expansionary
monetary conditions and lower interest rates in general.
Federal Reserve has rarely used the discount rate as a monetary policy
tool. It has two main reasons:
1. It is difficult to predict changes in bank discount window borrowing when
the discount rate changes.
2. Signaling importance.
3. Reserve Requirements- a portions of deposits that banks must hold in cash, either
in their vaults or on deposit at a Reserve Bank.
A decrease in the reserve requirement ratio means that depository institutions
may hold fewer reserves against their transaction accounts.
An increase in reserve requirements is contradictory because it reduces the
funds available in the banking system to lend to consumers and businesses.
The Board of Governors has sole authority over changes to reserve
requirements.
The Fed rarely Changes reserve Requirements.
A decrease in the reserve requirement results in a multiplier increase in the
supply of bank deposits and thus the money supply. The multiplier effect can
be written as follows:
Change in bank deposits= (1/new reserve requirement) x Increase in
reserves created by reserve requirement change.
4. Interest on Reserves- is the newest and most frequently used tool given to the Fed
by Congress after the Financial Crisis of 2007-2009.
Is paid on excess reserves held at Reserve Banks.
1. Expansionary Activities
2. Contractionary Activities
Money Supply versus Interest Rate Tagging
The relationship between interest rate and money supply is all else being
equal, a larger money supply lowers market interest rate.
Conversely, smaller money supplies tend to raise market interest rates.
Systemwide Rescue Programs Employed During the Financial Crisis
1. Expansion of retail deposit insurance
Increased retail bank deposit insurance coverage was widely used during the
crisis to ensure continued access to deposit funding.
2. Capital Injection
Direct injections of capital by central governments were the main mechanism
used to directly support bank balance sheets. Governments increased banks’
capital by injecting combinations of common shares, preference shares,
warrants, subordinated debt, mandatory convertible notes, or silent
participations. These capital injections improved bank’s abilities to absorb
additional losses and strengthened protection for banks’ uninsured creditors.
It allows the bank to increase their lending.
3. Debt Guarantees
As financial market froze, so did the wholesale funding market used by banks
to support lending activities. In response to these events, government
announced state guarantees on bank wholesale debt.
Governments provided explicit guarantees against default on uninsured bank
liabilities.
It allowed the banks to maintain access to reasonably priced, medium term
funding.
They also reduced liquidity risk and lowered overall borrowing costs for
banks.
4. Asset purchases or guarantees
Asset purchase programs removed distressed assets from balance sheets.
Asset purchase and guarantee programs were not used extensively. A main
reason for this is that it was difficult to determine the price at which the
central bank would purchase the distressed assets.
A purchase price set too close to par effectively amounted to a covert
recapitalization of the bank.