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Overview: Mon, May 20

Daily Agenda

Time Indicator/Event Comment
07:30Bostic (FOMC voter)
Appears on Bloomberg television
08:45Bostic (FOMC voter)Gives welcoming remarks at Atlanta Fed conference
09:00Barr (FOMC voter)Speaks at financial markets conference
09:00Waller (FOMC voter)
Gives welcoming remarks
10:30Jefferson (FOMC voter)
On the economy and the housing market
11:3013- and 26-wk bill auction$70 billion apiece
14:00Mester (FOMC voter)
Appears on Bloomberg television
19:00Bostic (FOMC voter)Moderates discussion at financial markets conference

US Economy

Federal Reserve and the Overnight Market

Treasury Finance

This Week's MMO

  • MMO for May 20, 2024

     

    This week’s MMO includes our regular quarterly tabulations of major foreign bank holdings of reserve balances at the Federal Reserve.  Once again, FBOs appear to have compressed their holdings of Fed balances by nearly $300 billion on the latest (March 31) quarter-end statement date.  As noted in the past, we think FBO window-dressing effects are one of a number of ways to gauge the extent of surplus reserves in the banking system at present.  The head of the New York Fed’s market group earlier this month highlighted a few others, which we discuss this week as well.  The bottom line on all of these measures is that any concerns about potential reserve stringency are still a very long way off.

Energy Prices

Sandra Pianalto

Sun, February 20, 2005

In the long run, a central bank supplying more money cannot create more energy resources, but a credible monetary policy will help smooth economic adjustments that higher energy prices might require.

Alan Greenspan

Wed, February 16, 2005

The sharp rise in oil prices over the past year has no doubt boosted firms' costs and may have weighed on production...However, the share of total business expenses attributable to energy costs has declined appreciably over the past 30 years, which has helped to buffer profits and the economy more generally from the adverse effect of high oil and natural gas prices.

William Poole

Wed, January 19, 2005

Today’s economy can endure periods of sharply higher energy prices that, in earlier periods, might have caused considerable economic disruption. Indeed, one of the remarkable aspects of last year’s economic performance was just how well the economy performed in spite of a sharp run-up in energy prices. Unfortunately, many of those in the business of discussing the U.S. economy seem to underestimate our economy’s resilience.

William Poole

Wed, January 19, 2005

In a market-based economy like ours, the pricing mechanism eventually allocates resources to their most productive uses. Hence, higher oil prices will stimulate both increased production and active energy conservation measures, both of which will tend to limit further price increases and perhaps reduce prices over time.

Timothy Geithner

Wed, January 12, 2005

The global economy has weathered the oil price shock quite well. If the long term futures prices are right, we need to be prepared to live with the possibility of a sustained period of higher oil prices, and perhaps more volatility in oil prices, and the world seems to be getting itself more prepared for that prospect.

Cathy Minehan

Tue, January 11, 2005

There are good reasons to believe that the impact of last year’s oil and gas price increases will be transient...It is unlikely that we will experience the pace of oil price appreciation this year that we did last year.

Jack Guynn

Sun, January 09, 2005

Let’s keep in mind that many of our oil supplies and future oil reserves are found in parts of the world that are not the most politically stable. All of these factors suggest we continue to keep a wary eye on energy as a pivotal economic issue and potential source of risk.

Anthony Santomero

Mon, November 15, 2004

I have outlined several risk factors that could alter the short-term dynamics of the economy - oil prices, the trade balance and the federal budget. The course that these factors take will figure into the precise path the Fed follows.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, October 20, 2004

Although traders expect the price of oil to decline somewhat from recent highs, they also believe that a significant part of the recent increase in prices will be long lived.

Alan Greenspan

Thu, October 14, 2004

So far this year, the rise in the value of imported oil--essentially a tax on U.S. residents--has amounted to about 3/4 percent of GDP.

Alan Greenspan

Mon, July 19, 2004

Inflation also seems to have been boosted by transitory factors such as the surge in energy prices. Those higher prices, by eroding households' disposable income, have accounted for at least some of the observed softness in consumer spending of late, a softness which should prove short-lived.

Alan Greenspan

Tue, December 05, 2000

As we learned from previous episodes, rising energy prices could engender risks to both inflation and economic activity. If accommodated by monetary policy, the jump in energy prices could spill over into general inflation and inflationary expectations, as was so evident in the 1970s. At the same time, the hike in the price of imported energy has acted, in effect, as a tax equivalent of roughly one percent of national income. Although there is as yet little evidence of the type of destabilizing inflationary pressures observed in the aftermath of previous oil price spikes or of exceptionally large restraint on consumer spending, Middle East tensions have heightened such risks.

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MMO Analysis