Federal Reserve Economic Data

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Unexpected changes to the benchmark U.S. interest rate

Discretion is the better part of valor

Quoting from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System website: “The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is the monetary policymaking body of the Federal Reserve System… The FOMC schedules eight meetings per year, one about every six weeks or so. The Committee may also hold unscheduled meetings as necessary to review economic and financial developments.”

One of those unscheduled meetings took place on Sunday, March 15. At that time, the FOMC announced a reduction in the benchmark U.S. interest rate target range by a full percentage point. This decision was made ahead of the regularly scheduled March 17-18 meeting. How often does the FOMC do this? That is, how often does it change its monetary policy target without waiting for a regularly scheduled meeting? FRED can help us answer that question.

The purple bars in the FRED graph above show the change in the federal funds target rate (which is a series that was discontinued after December 16, 2008, and the green bars show the change in the federal funds target range (upper and lower limits). The spacing between the bars shows the pace of interest rate adjustments. Because the data are at a daily frequency (including Sundays), we can see details more easily if we zoom in…

In the graph above, we’ve zoomed in to the months between June 2004 and August 2006, showing 17 increases in the target rate, matched to the regular FOMC meetings. All the changes in the target rate were of the same size: 0.25% (or 25 basis points).

Now, look at the months between August 2007 and July 2009. You can see 10 decreases in the target rate: 8 were announced at the regular FOMC meetings and 2 were in between meetings (January 22 and October 8, 2008). The changes in the target rate were of different sizes, ranging from 0.25% to 0.75% (or 25 to 75 basis points). Note that the December 16, 2008, change in the target rate was accompanied by the implementation of the target range, with upper and lower limits.

Over the past 20 years, the FOMC has held 184 meetings, 30 of which were unscheduled. During the same period, the FOMC changed its monetary policy target 54 times, 7 of which occurred after unscheduled meetings, which amounts to 13% of all policy target changes. You can also keep track of this schedule yourself: The Federal Reserve Board publishes the list of meetings and the list of open market operations that have changed the monetary policy rate

How these graphs were created: Search for and select “federal funds target rate (DISCONTINUED)” (series ID DFEDTAR). From the “Edit Graph” panel, use the “Add Line” to search for and select “federal funds target range upper limit” (series ID DFEDTARU). Repeat for “federal funds target range lower limit” (series ID DFEDTARL). For all lines, change the units to “Change, Percent.” For the second and third graphs, adjust the time periods.

Suggested by Diego Mendez-Carbajo.

View on FRED, series used in this post: DFEDTAR, DFEDTARL, DFEDTARU

Bank lending standards and loan growth

Monitoring lending activity in troubled times

One of the many serious concerns about the ongoing coronavirus pandemic is that affected firms will find it difficult to continue to pay interest and principal on their outstanding bank loans, while many firms will require additional loans to tide them over until normal levels of economic activity resume. It’s likely banks will want to help their customers weather the downturn, but some might be reluctant or incapable of extending a large volume of new loans, particularly when the specter of a possible, perhaps likely, recession looms.

A reliable indicator of the willingness of banks to make loans is the Fed’s quarterly Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices. Researchers find that bank lending tends to slow after an increase in the percentage of banks that are tightening lending standards. The FRED graph plots the compound annual rate of change in commercial and industrial loans alongside the net percentage of banks tightening standards for such loans to large and middle-market firms.

As the grapht shows, loan growth tends to slow (increase) following an increase (decline) in the net percentage of banks reporting a tightening of lending standards. Moreover, substantial net tightening of standards occurred before and during recessions in 2001 and 2008-09. As of January 2020 (the most recent survey month), the net percentage of banks reporting a tightening of standards was close to zero. In recent weeks, the Federal Reserve has taken several actions to encourage banks to continue to lend to businesses and households during the pandemic event. The net percentage of banks reporting a tightening of lending standards in upcoming surveys will likely be a good indicator of how strong lending will be through the remainder of 2020 and into 2021.

How this graph was created: Search for and select “Net Percentage of Domestic Banks Tightening Standards for Commercial and Industrial Loans to Large and Middle-Market Firms” (FRED series ID DRTSCILM). From the “Edit Graph” panel, use the “Add Line” feature to search for and select the “Commercial and Industrial Loans, All Commercial Banks” series (FRED series ID TOTCI). From the “Edit Line 2” tab, modify units to “Compounded Annual Rate of Change” and frequency to “Quarterly.” Then, from the “Format” tab, change “Line 2 Y-Axis position” to “Right.” Finally, adjust the sample period to a time when both series are available.

Suggested by Qiuhan Sun and David Wheelock.

View on FRED, series used in this post: DRTSCILM, TOTCI

The St. Louis Fed’s Financial Stress Index, Version 2.0

Economists, banking regulators, policymakers, and financial market analysts use a variety of indicators to monitor financial market conditions. Many indicators are constructed from market-based prices, since information about the health of the economy, a bank, or a firm is often reflected in equity and debt markets. So market prices are forward-looking indicators of potential changes in economic and financial conditions.

The best known macroeconomic measures are interest rate spreads between so-called “risk-free” and “risky” securities. For example, the spread between long-term and short-term Treasury yields—often termed the yield curve—tends to be a reliable forecaster of future economic growth. (See McCracken, 2018, and Owyang and Shell, 2016.)

To help the public monitor financial market conditions on a weekly basis, the St. Louis Fed unveiled a financial market stress index (FSI) in 2010. (See Kliesen and Smith, 2010.) Similar to other FSIs, the St. Louis Fed’s (STLFSI) measures different types of financial market stress. Falling prices of financial market assets—such as stock prices—is an obvious example, since it could signal expectations of lower corporate profits due to slower growth of aggregate economic activity. Other types of stress include changing market perceptions of “risk” in its different forms. As noted above, risk is often measured by examining interest rate spreads: Default risk is regularly measured as the difference between yields on a “risky” asset (e.g., corporate bonds) and a “risk-free” asset (e.g., U.S. Treasury securities). But financial market stress can arise in other dimensions, too.

One type of risk prominent in the 2008-2009 financial crisis is once again present—in the current COVID-19 (novel coronavirus) crisis. It is the inability of many financial institutions to secure funding to finance their short-term liabilities, such as repurchase agreements (repos). This type of risk is known as “liquidity risk.” Yet another type of risk is uncertainty about the future direction of inflation, termed inflation risk.

The STLFSI, as with all other FSIs, attempts to measure financial market stress by combining many indicators into a single index number. This index number then becomes a collective measure of financial market stress. How is this accomplished?

The STLFSI is calculated using principal component analysis (PCA), which is a statistical method of extracting a small number of factors responsible for the co-movement of a larger group of variables. Specifically, the STLFSI is the first principal component of 18 distinct measures of financial stress and is thus a measure of overall financial market stress. The STLFSI used weekly data beginning in late 1993 from 18 data series: 7 interest rates, 6 yield spreads, and 5 other indicators. Values of the STLFSI above 0 indicated higher-than-average levels of financial market stress, while values below 0 indicated lower-than-average levels of stress.

Over time, we understood that the original construction of the STLFSI wasn’t adequately capturing some stresses that had developed in the financial markets. This was easy to spot visually on a graph: Despite several economic and financial market developments, the index fell below 0 in mid-2010 and has indicated below-average levels of financial market stress ever since. So we’ve unveiled an improved version—STLFSI 2.0—that makes a few simple, but necessary, changes to the original version unveiled in 2010.

Our plan is to publish a more thorough analysis later in the year,  documenting our motivation and methodological changes that we believe make STLFSI 2.0 an improvement.

The key difference between versions 1.0 and 2.0 is that 2.0 uses daily changes in interest rates and stock prices, rather than the levels of interest rates and stock prices in the PCA calculation. Why is this important? The full answer is more complicated, but the primary reason is that interest rates have trended lower and stock prices have trended higher, on average, over the period the STLFSI calculation covers. This has introduced a subtle  but nevertheless important statistical bias in the calculation of the STLFSI. This table summarizes the transformation applied to the data series used to construct the STLFSI.

The figure plots the new version of the STLFSI along with the original version we’re retiring. Here are two examples why we believe the STLFSI 2.0 more accurately measures financial stress:

On August 5, 2011, Standard and Poor’s reduced the long-term sovereign credit rating on the United States from AAA to AA+. Although other rating agencies maintained the AAA-rating on U.S. Treasury debt, this action severely rattled equity markets, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell nearly 2,000 points over the next two weeks. However, the original version of the STLFSI continued to report below-average levels of financial market stress (values less than 0). The revised STLFSI, however, moved decisively above 0, indicating above-average levels of financial market stress, peaking at 1.2.

The second example is the ongoing turmoil in financial markets stemming from the fear and uncertainty associated with the COVID-19 pandemic. Since mid-February 2020, and continuing through the week ending March 20, 2020, COVID-19 uncertainty has triggered a massive sell-off in stocks and consequent plunge in stock prices, sharp declines in interest rates, and stunning increases in financial market volatility. Still, the original version of the STLFSI continued to report financial stress slightly below average (-0.1). The revised STLFSI, however, has increased sharply—reminiscent of the worst of the financial market turmoil during the Great Recession in 2008-2009—registering a value close to 5.8.

The data and information services of the St. Louis Fed’s Research Division are intended to illuminate economic and financial concepts, educate, and enhance decisionmaking. In this vein, it is our view that STLFSI 2.0 better captures evolving stresses in financial markets. Our new version suggests that the tectonic upheaval in financial market conditions today has, thus far, been surpassed only by the upheaval registered in 2008-2009.

Suggested by Kevin Kliesen and Michael McCracken, with the research assistance of Kathryn Bokun and Aaron Amburgey.

View on FRED, series used in this post: STLFSI, STLFSI2


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