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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

Janet Yellen

Sun, July 30, 2006

Recent evidence suggests that there has been much less passthrough in the past twenty-five years than there was back in the 1970s, when inflation got out of control in the face of soaring energy prices. If it's true that there's only a very small passthrough of higher energy prices to inflation currently, then that raises the concern that something more fundamental is pushing up inflation. Unfortunately, at this point, it's too soon to untangle these alternative interpretations.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, July 19, 2006

If you look even today at the futures markets, the futures markets predict energy prices will be relatively flat over the next couple of years. If you take that forecast as correct, then today's core inflation rate is actually a reasonable forecast of tomorrow's total inflation rate if energy prices do, in fact, flatten out as the markets seem to expect.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, July 19, 2006

With respect to wages, there are alternative measures of wages that give somewhat different answers, but I agree that, for example, that average hourly earnings for production workers as measured by the payroll survey has not shown real gains.  And one of the key problems there, it's important to note, is, in fact, the increase in energy prices. So what people get at the pay stub, they lose at the gas pump.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, July 19, 2006

The increase in energy prices is clearly making the economy worse off, both in terms of real activity and in terms of inflation. There's no question about it.

Ben Bernanke

Tue, July 18, 2006

Futures quotes imply that market participants expect petroleum prices to roughly stabilize in coming quarters; such an outcome would, over time, reduce one source of upward pressure on inflation.  However, expectations of a leveling out of oil prices have been consistently disappointed in recent years, and as the experience of the past week suggests, possible decreases in these and other commodity prices remain a risk to the inflation outlook.

Ben Bernanke

Tue, July 18, 2006

And so this increase in energy prices and commodity prices certainly has been a significant contributor [to inflation]. And I think that we wouldn't really be talking about this now if energy prices were still $30 or $40 a barrel.

Ben Bernanke

Tue, July 18, 2006

To the extent that the Fed's credibility is strong and people think that inflation will be low in the long term, when energy price increases hit, it causes a temporary burst of inflation. But if nobody expects it to continue, then it will just moderate away and we don't get into this pattern of having to raise rates a lot and getting into an inflationary situation.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, June 14, 2006

But beginning around 2003, futures prices began moving up roughly in line with the rise in spot prices. Thus, unlike in earlier episodes, the significantly higher relative price of energy that we are now experiencing is expected to be relatively long lasting and thus will likely prompt more-significant adjustments by households and businesses over time.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, June 14, 2006

In all likelihood, growth in the demand for energy will be tempered to some extent by continued improvements in energy efficiency which, in turn, will be stimulated by higher prices and ongoing concerns about the security of oil supplies. Such improvements are possible even without technological breakthroughs.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, June 14, 2006

Today's proved reserve figures ignore not only the potential for new discoveries but also the likelihood that improved technologies and higher oil prices will increase the amount of oil that can be economically recovered.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, June 14, 2006

Natural gas prices are likely to remain elevated for at least the coming few years. It is possible, however, that within a decade new supplies from previously untapped areas of North America could boost available output here, while imports of LNG will increase to more substantial levels as countries seek to bring their isolated natural gas reserves to market. Given time, these developments could serve to lower natural gas prices in the United States significantly.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, June 14, 2006

The supply-demand fundamentals seem consistent with the view now taken by market participants that the days of persistently cheap oil and natural gas are likely behind us.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, June 14, 2006

In the long run, higher energy prices are likely to reduce somewhat the productive capacity of the U.S. economy. That outcome would occur, for example, if high energy costs make businesses less willing to invest in new capital or cause some existing capital to become economically obsolete. All else being equal, these effects tend to restrain the growth of labor productivity, which in turn implies that real wages and profits will be lower than they otherwise would have been. Also, the higher cost of imported oil is likely to adversely affect our terms of trade; that is, Americans will have to sell more goods and services abroad to pay for a given quantity of oil and other imports. For the medium term at least, the higher bill for oil imports will increase the U.S. current account deficit, implying a greater need for foreign financing.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, June 14, 2006

Under the assumption that energy prices do not move sharply higher from their already high levels, these long-run effects, though clearly negative, appear to be manageable.

Ben Bernanke

Wed, June 14, 2006

It is a tribute to the underlying strength and resiliency of the U.S. economy that it has been able to perform well despite the drag from increased energy prices.

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MMO Analysis