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The Road to Normal N E W D I R E C T I O N S I N M O N E TA RY P O L I C Y F E D E R A L R E S E R V E B A N K O F S T. L O U I S ANNUAL REPORT 2015 ILLINOIS Clark Rutledge O’Fallon Warren St. Charles M Osage St. Louis T H E F E D : A S T A R T I N G Miller P O I NMaries T Gasconade MISSOURI Cole RI VE R Madison Bond St. Louis City Carlyle St. Louis Clinton Wayne C ME VE RI De Soto Osage Beach A ER R Do you want to learn about Camden the Fed but don’tRIknow where to begin? MStart VE E Rolla Crawford Washington AD Washington Marissa Monroe Richland Marion Clay St. Clair Franklin Jefferson R Louisville R VE Jefferson City C Fayette RI Moniteau Alton H AS AB W O ISS ER RIV Effingham Effingham Jasper Jersey Lincoln E TL I UR Rockbridge Montgomery Macoupin T LI Columbia Callaway Greene Edwards U MISSO Morgan Randolph Mount Vernon Jefferson Perry Franklin M Ste. ISSIS Genevieve SIPP Hamilton ansas City Pike Laddonia Audrain Hallsville Boone ER RI RIV Scott R Randolph Ralls Louisiana VE RI Monroe Pike PI IP SS SI IS Monroe City M Hannibal KA SK AS KI A Marion un Atlanta Macon Shelby Mount Sterling Adams Brown Montgomery 35 Lewis Calho Kirksville Adair Knox White Omaha Ev Royalton with this: The Federal Reserve, our nation’s central bank, has three main Phelps IR components: the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C., the Federal Farmington IV Saline Gallatin Jackson ER Pulaski Lebanon Williamson Perry St. Francois Unio Open Market Committee and the 12 Reserve banks around the country, Iron Stonefort Dallas which include Bolivar the Federal ReserveLaclede Bank of St.Licking Louis. The St. Louis FedCenterville serves Hardin Union Johnson Pope Dent Cape Polk Madison the Eighth Dade Federal Reserve District, which includes all of Arkansas, eastern Girardeau Crittende Reynolds Greene Cape Girardeau Texas Missouri, southern Illinois and Indiana, western Kentucky and Tennessee, Pulaski Massac Bollinger Fre and northernSpringfield Mississippi. Webster The Eighth District has headquarters in St. Louis Eminence C Wright Wayne Scott and branches in Little Rock, Ark., Louisville, Ky., and Memphis, Tenn. Ballard Shannon Walnut Ridge Carlisle Fulton Graves Calloway Wingo Cottage Grove Union City Obion Lake Dunklin Benton Marshall T New Madrid Maynard Eureka Springs Want to go further? Explore our website at www.stlouisfed.org. For an Baxter Clay Fulton ntonville Randolph Carroll Boonehistory of the Federal Reserve System and the Benton in-depth but easy-to-read Horseshoe Bend Marion Greene St. Louis Fed, see our centennial annual report at www.stlouisfed.org/ Sharp Izard Fayetteville annual-report/2013. Jasper Lyon McCracken Sikeston Stoddard Hickman Mountain View Mississippi Lawrence Christian In this report, you will learn more about what the St. Louis Fed is doing Carter Douglas Poplar Bluff HowellFederal Reserve today, as well as about a key issue involving the entire Barry Stone Bransonissue, the normalization of monetary policy, is Butler System—and Oregon Ripley Taney Cassville country. That Ozark covered in our featured essay and in a message from our president. Bakersfield Livingston Alexander ON SC GA Weakley Pemiscot Henry Benton Rutherford Dyer Gibson Carroll Blytheville Halls Jonesboro Mississippi Crockett Searcy Craighead Lauderdale Madison Henderson Haywood Poinsett Newport Franklin Jackson Clinton Brownsville Johnson Crawford Marked Tree Van Buren Jackson Clarksville Tipton Cleburne Chester Pope Fort Smith Cross Conway Shelby McCrory Searcy Bolivar Fayette Crittenden Logan Faulkner Hardin Sebastian White McNairy Booneville Woodruff Hardeman Perryville Yell Forrest City Prairie St. Francis Perry Benton Pulaski Lonoke De Soto RIVER R Alcorn Scott AFAYE VE CHE L Tippah RI FOUR Lee R Marshall E Saline AT Blue Mountain Montgomery Garland W LD Tate Monroe Prentiss O Polk Tunica C Helena Abbeville Hot Springs Panola Phillips Union Lafayette Jonestown Jefferson Tupelo Arkansas Hot Spring Wickes Grant Pike Pine Bluff Pontotoc Lee Coahoma Quitman AR KA Arkadelphia Yalobusha NS AS RIV Charleston ER Calhoun Chickasaw Murfreesboro Sevier Lincoln Clark Dallas Rison Tallahatchie Monroe Cleveland Calhoun City Desha Newton Mountain View Stone Independence Lawrence Decatur Madison IR IPP MI ER IV SS ISS ER HI TC HA IVE R Washington E RIVER TENNESSE PI R IVE PI R SSI SSI P A CHIT OUA Howard ARKANSAS Itawamba Little Rock Tishomingo Memphis Annual Report 2015 F E D E R A L R E S E R V E B A N K O F S T. L O U I S © THINKSTOCK | RUDYBALASKO Published April 8, 2016 Available online at stlouisfed.org/annual-report/2015 COVER PHOTO: © THINKSTOCK | JUPITERIMAGES Table of Contents President’s Message 3 The Road to Normal: New Directions in Monetary Policy 6 Our Work. Our People. 24 Our Leaders. Our Advisers. 30 Chair’s Message 31 Boards of Directors, Advisory Councils, Bank Officers 32 Our financial statements are available online. To read them, go to the website for the annual report, www.stlouisfed.org/annual-report, and click on the Financial Statements button in the navigation bar of the 2015 report. 2 | Annual Report 2015 P R E S I D E N T ’ S M E S S AG E The Road to Normal N E C E S S A R Y, E V E N I F W E G O I T A L O N E U ntil about seven years ago, the U.S. had not seen shortterm nominal interest rates basically at zero since the Great Depression and World War II.1 Historically, macroeconomists looked at that era as an aberration—a situation that was not the normal state of affairs for either the U.S. economy or most economies around the world. But that view is now challenged. Recent encounters with zero rates here in the U.S. and around the globe suggest that zero-interest-rate environments are long-lasting and that the macroeconomic experience in a zero-rate environment is not particularly good. Returning to a macroeconomic equilibrium that includes somewhat higher nominal interest rates may lead to better outcomes for the U.S. economy. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE James Bullard stlouisfed.org | 3 During the 2007-2009 crisis, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) set a target range for the federal funds rate at 0-0.25 percent. It remained there from December 2008 to December 2015, when the FOMC increased the target range by 25 basis points (to 0.25-0.5 percent). This step is ideally the first of many steps in the process of normalizing U.S. monetary policy. From a global perspective, however, normalization is not occurring. While the U.S. has started increasing interest rates, most of the other major economies outside of China are still at zero (or even at negative “Why is normalization expected to take so long, and why isn’t the world normalizing monetary policy along with the Fed? The lack of inflation pressure helps address both questions.” interest rates) and are not planning to come off zero anytime soon. In fact, in addition to low interest rate policies, the European Central Bank is currently in the middle of an aggressive quantitative easing (QE) program, as is the Bank of Japan. If one believes that global markets are well-integrated, then global interest rates overall likely will remain close to zero for a long time. Even if the Fed continues to raise interest rates, U.S. monetary policy will remain exceptionally accommodative through the medium term. In addition to stressing that policy decisions will be datadependent,2 the FOMC’s statement following its Dec. 16, 2015, meeting said, “The Committee expects 4 | Annual Report 2015 that economic conditions will evolve in a manner that will warrant only gradual increases in the federal funds rate; the federal funds rate is likely to remain, for some time, below levels that are expected to prevail in the longer run.”3 Furthermore, the FOMC has stated that it expects to wait until normalization is well-underway before starting to normalize the Fed’s balance sheet, which increased from about $800 billion in 2006 to about $4.5 trillion due to the Fed’s QE programs. (As a result of the exceptionally large balance sheet, the Fed has had to change tactics on how it operates in shortterm interest rate markets. See the main essay in this annual report for more details.) Why is normalization expected to take so long, and why isn’t the world normalizing monetary policy along with the Fed? The lack of inflation pressure helps address both questions. Inflation has been very low in the U.S. and in other major industrialized economies that are part of the Group of Seven (G-7), in part because of a commodity cycle in which energy prices have declined dramatically since mid-2014. Low inflation has been the major surprise of the era, given that central banks in these countries have implemented zero-interest rates and other supplemental types of monetary policy. Why higher inflation has not occurred so far despite these aggressive monetary policies is a topic of debate, causing macroeconomists to revisit their models. But with inflation still low, one might ask, “Why normalize at all?” Although headline inflation remains low, inflation net of the decline in oil prices is reasonably close to the Fed’s 2 percent target. Moreover, forecasts suggest that headline inflation will move back to the target once oil prices stabilize. On the employment side of the Fed’s dual mandate, labor markets are now close to normal. Thus, a key reason for normalizing policy is that the FOMC’s goals regarding inflation and employment have essentially been met, while the policy settings remain far from normal. Another reason to normalize is that staying at zero could cause distortions in the economy. For example, a major bubble in asset prices could result, and if the bubble bursts, a recession could follow—much like we saw during the mid-2000s. A second example of a distortion is that the very low rates of return on saving may be creating disincentives for saving. Tilting policy toward borrowers for such a long period of time, however, may not be optimal. Furthermore, the low returns on saving are hurting retirees and others who are counting on that income.4 A third reason for wanting to normalize policy goes back to the U.S. experience during 1984-2007. The U.S. had long expansions and relatively mild recessions then. That era was characterized by less volatility and faster growth than occurred in the 1970s. In addition, monetary policy was relatively well-understood in the 1984-2007 period, and policy was adjusted in both directions in response to economic shocks. In short, the U.S. macroeconomic equilibrium during that period—when nominal interest rates were higher— was associated with good economic outcomes. If we are unable to return to such a situation, it would be unclear how monetary policy would be implemented and what the new equilibrium would look like, specifically in terms of macroeconomic volatility.5 Prudent monetary policy, therefore, suggests moving monetary policy settings closer to normal. ENDNOTES 1 The rate on three-month Treasury bills was near zero for much of the 1930s and early 1940s and was pegged at 3/8 percent from early 1942 to July 1947. See Carlson, Mark; Eggertsson, Gauti; and Mertens, Elmar. “Federal Reserve Experiences with Very Low Interest Rates: Lessons Learned,” FOMC Memo Dec. 5, 2008, at www.federalreserve.gov/ monetarypolicy/files/FOMC20081212memo02.pdf. 2 For more on data dependency, see my column in the January 2016 issue of The Regional Economist, “What Does Data Dependence Mean?” at www.stlouisfed.org/ publications/regional-economist/january-2016/what-doesdata-dependence-mean, and in the January 2015 issue, “Liftoff: A Comparison of Two Normalization Cycles,” at www.stlouisfed.org/publications/regional-economist/ january-2015/presidents-message. 3 See the FOMC statement on Dec. 16, 2015, at www. federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/monetary/ 20151216a.htm. 4 See also my speech on June 26, 2014, “Income Inequality and Monetary Policy: A Framework with Answers to Three Questions,” at www.stlouisfed.org/~/media/Files/PDFs/ Bullard/remarks/Bullard_CFR_26June2014_Final.pdf. 5 For more discussion, see my speech on Nov. 12, 2015, “Permazero,” at www.stlouisfed.org/~/media/Files/PDFs/ Bullard/remarks/Bullard-Permazero-Cato-12Nov2015.pdf. James Bullard President and CEO stlouisfed.org | 5 ABOUT THE AUTHOR Stephen Williamson is an economist and vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. His research focuses on monetary economics, macroeconomics and financial economics. For more on his work, see https://research. stlouisfed.org/econ/williamson. F E AT U R E D E S S AY The Road to Normal N E W D I R E C T I O N S I N M O N E TA RY P O L I C Y By Stephen Williamson D ecisions made by the Federal Reserve System (the Fed) about monetary policy matter in important ways for all people living in the United States. Indeed, because of the size of the U.S. economy and the close financial ties between the U.S. and the rest of the world, the stance of Fed monetary policy matters for everyone on the globe. For definitions of terms in bold, see the Glossary on pp. 21-22. 8 | Annual Report 2015 The important role of the Fed in affecting economic outcomes for all U.S. residents was recognized in the Employment Act of 1946 and a 1978 amendment to that act (often called the Humphrey-Hawkins amendment). Congress assigned the Fed a dual mandate: to achieve “price stability” and “maximum employment.” In its Statement of Longer-Run Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy, the Federal Open Market Committee—or the FOMC, the main policymaking body of the Fed—stated that its goal, consistent with its price stability mandate, is an annual 2 percent rate of inflation, as measured by the rate of change in the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) deflator. Maximum employment is evaluated more broadly: A range of labor market and other indicators is considered, including the unemployment rate, employment growth and the growth rate in real gross domestic product (GDP). Conventionally, the Fed acts to set a target for the federal funds rate—a very short-term interest rate (on overnight borrowing between financial institutions); to achieve the target, the Fed intervenes in financial markets by issuing money—reserves and currency—in exchange for U.S. Treasury securities. The federal funds rate, or fed funds rate, then affects all interest rates, including those on U.S. Treasury debt, mortgages, corporate bonds, credit cards and auto loans. Thus, conventional monetary policy has a direct effect on all creditors and debtors—millions of households and businesses in the U.S. economy—simply through the effects of Fed actions on interest rates. But there are additional effects. In controlling market interest rates, the Fed also influences aggregate spending, employment and inflation. Some of these effects are only temporary; some last for a long time. For example, there is wide agreement among economists that the effects of monetary policy on employment and the total output of goods and services produced and sold in the U.S. are only temporary— perhaps extending at most over a couple of years. But monetary policy can control inflation not just in the short run but also in the long run. In response to the global financial crisis and the unusually slow recovery from the ensuing Great Recession, the Fed engaged in some unconventional monetary policies. These unusual policies consisted of a long period of close-to-zero interest rates, forward guidance and quantitative easing. Currently, the fed funds rate is much lower than it would be if the Fed were responding to macroeconomic conditions in the same way as it was prior to the Great Recession. As well, the Fed’s balance sheet is more than five times its size at the onset of the Great Recession, as the result of quantitative easing. At its December 2015 meeting, the Fed embarked on a program of monetary policy normalization. What was abnormal about the policies of the previous seven or eight years? What exactly does normalization entail, and how long will it take? How will people be affected by normalization? The purpose of this article is to answer these questions and to ultimately weigh the arguments for and against normalization. The Origins of Unconventional Monetary Policy in the U.S. The Great Recession, dating from late 2007 to mid-2009, is generally understood as originating from severe disruption in the financial sector. Incentive problems in the mortgage market, created primarily by defects in the U.S. financial regulatory structure, led to the global financial crisis in late 2007 through F I GU R E 1 Total Lending from the Federal Reserve to Depository Institutions 750 Billions of U.S. dollars 600 450 300 150 Last observation is December 2015 0 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Sources: Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Note: Lending spiked as the Federal Reserve responded to the financial crisis but returned to pre-Great Recession levels by 2013. Shaded regions represent recessions. F I GU R E 2 Federal Funds Rate 20 1.0 0.75 15 Percent per annum early 2009. The crisis manifested itself in a collapse in the prices of U.S. real estate, which led to mortgage defaults and dysfunction in the financial markets that were closely tied to those mortgages. These markets were principally in mortgage-backed securities (MBS), which used those securities as collateral, and in derivatives. Financial distress spread through tightly connected worldwide financial markets, culminating in the failure of Lehman Brothers and the near-collapse of other large U.S. financial institutions in the latter half of 2008. As early as the late 19th century, there was a good understanding of crisis intervention by central banks to prevent or mitigate financial panic through central bank lending; this was well-articulated in the work of Walter Bagehot in 1873 in Lombard Street.1 Nevertheless, the Fed appeared to forget these lessons during the Great Depression, which started in 1929. As has been frequently argued (for example, by economists Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz in a book in 1963), the Fed did not use its lending powers wisely during that period, especially in the 1933 banking crisis. With the onset of the latest financial crisis, the Fed did not want to repeat the errors of the Great Depression; so, it responded aggressively in terms of lending to commercial banks and other financial institutions. Figure 1 shows total lending, which increased somewhat in the spring of 2008 before a substantial spike in the fall of 2008. Then, lending declined sharply so that, at the end of the Great Recession (the wider shaded area in the chart), total lending was about onehalf what it was at its peak in the fall of 2008. By the beginning of 2013, lending had tapered off, reaching pre-Great Recession levels. In addition to crisis lending, the Fed resorted to the use of conventional interest rate policy in response to the financial crisis. The Fed’s target for the overnight fed funds rate was cut beginning in late 2007 and ultimately reached near-zero levels by the end of 2008, when the fed funds rate was targeted at a range of 0 to 0.25 percent. (See Figure 2.) By the end of the Great Recession in mid-2009, the financial crisis had passed and so had much of the Fed’s emergency lending programs. (See Figure 1.) 0.5 0.25 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 10 Last observation is December 2015 5 0 1954 1964 1974 1984 1994 2004 2014 Sources: Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Note: The federal funds rate target was cut in late 2007 in response to the financial crisis. The rate stayed at near-zero levels from December 2008 to December 2015. Shaded regions represent recessions. stlouisfed.org | 9 But the 2007-2009 recession had been quite deep, so the Fed’s interest rate policy was still on emergency setting, with the fed funds rate target remaining at 0 to 0.25 percent. As well, the Fed had begun experiments with two unconventional policy tools—forward guidance and quantitative easing.2 Forward guidance consists of promises made by the central bank concerning its future actions. Generally, modern macroeconomic theory makes a convincing case that monetary policy works more effectively when the central bank behaves systematically so that policy is well-understood by the public. This is certainly part of what forward guidance is about. If forward guidance “If forward guidance is to work, the public must believe that the Fed’s statements about the future are not just cheap talk—the Fed’s promises must be credible.” is to work, the public must believe that the Fed’s statements about the future are not just cheap talk—the Fed’s promises must be credible. But there is more to forward guidance than that. In New Keynesian theory—as explained, for example, by economist Michael Woodford—the Fed has some policy leverage even when the nominal interest rate is at zero and can go no lower.3 Why? According to the theory, the Fed can make a promise to keep interest rates lower in the future than it otherwise would, and such a promise, if credible, will cause people to believe that inflation will be high in the future, causing them to borrow more and spend more today. Thus, New Keynesian theory recommends forward guidance as a means for the central bank to stimulate the economy by promising to be irresponsible in the future. 10 | Annual Report 2015 As of the end of the Great Recession, the Fed’s forward guidance consisted of the following promise: The Committee will maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and continues to anticipate that economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period.4 Such a promise seems consistent with Woodford’s New Keynesian ideas about the role of forward guidance. Quantitative easing (QE) is a central bank policy involving purchases of unconventional assets with somewhat unconventional goals in mind. Asset purchases are a conventional tool for monetary policy and have formed the cornerstone of Fed policy in normal times, at least since the founding of the FOMC in 1933. The Fed typically uses daily open market operations—the purchases and sales of short-term government securities (for example, a typical short-term government security is a 3-month Treasury bill, which matures three months from the date of issue)—to hit the overnight fed funds interest rate target set by the FOMC. Quantitative easing, which has typically been carried out when overnight interest rates are at or close to zero, involves the purchase of long-term assets (for example, 30-year Treasury bonds, which mature 30 years from the date of issue), and those assets need not be government-issued securities. The goal of quantitative easing is to lower the interest rates on long-term assets, rather than to lower short-term interest rates as with conventional easing. If quantitative easing works, it should reduce all long-term interest rates, including mortgage interest rates, for example. The Fed began its first quantitative easing program, sometimes called QE1, in November 2008, before the end of the Great Recession. QE1 involved the purchase of long-term Treasury securities, agency securities and mortgage-backed securities. MBS are tradeable securities, backed by underlying private mortgages. The recovery from the Great Recession proved to be unusually slow. Figure 3 shows a comparison of the recoveries following the 1981-82 recession—one of the more severe recessions in the post-World War II period F I GU R E 3 Real GDP during Two Recessions and Recoveries Index, beginning of each recession = 100 135 130 125 120 1981-1982 recession 115 110 2007-2009 recession 105 100 95 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Quarters since beginning of recession Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Note: The recovery from the Great Recession has occurred much more slowly than the recovery from the 1981-1982 recession, one of the more severe post-WWII recessions. F I GU R E 4 Total Securities Held Outright by the Federal Reserve QE1 4500 QE2 QE3 3750 Billions of U.S. dollars in the U.S.—and the Great Recession of 2007-09. The figure shows real GDP in each recession, scaled to 100 as of the beginning of the recession. As can be seen in the figure, it took about twice as long in the Great Recession for real GDP to attain its previous peak compared with real GDP performance in the recovery after the 1981-82 recession. Further, after more than seven years (30 quarters in the figure), the 1981-82 recovery was about 20 percent more advanced than was the recovery from the Great Recession. The relatively weak recovery, in the face of interest rates that had been unusually low and after some unconventional policies had already been put into effect, spurred the Fed to engage in further accommodation. Because the range for the fed funds rate was already 0-0.25 percent, there were no remaining accommodative options other than unconventional monetary policies. In terms of forward guidance, the language in the FOMC’s policy statements (released after each FOMC meeting) evolved over time, from the “extended period” language mentioned earlier, to promises to keep the fed funds rate in the 0-0.25 percent range at least until some calendar date in the future, to promises to keep the fed funds rate low at least until the unemployment rate had fallen below a 6.5 percent threshold (so long as projected inflation did not rise above 2.5 percent). In anticipation of crossing the unemployment rate threshold, in March 2014 the FOMC promised to keep the fed funds rate low for a “considerable time.” 5 As shown in Figure 2, the fed funds rate was close to zero for seven years, a zero-interest-rate policy (ZIRP) that was unprecedented in the modern period of U.S. monetary policy, which began in 1951.6 The Fed also continued with its QE policies after the Great Recession’s official end, which was in June 2009. The QE1 program continued until March 2010. Then, in August 2010, the FOMC instituted a reinvestment program, which served to replace long-term assets in the Fed’s portfolio as they matured. Any increase in the Fed’s balance sheet through asset purchases ultimately is removed when the purchased assets mature; so, the reinvestment policy acted to keep the QE policy from undoing itself naturally. The reinvestment policy remains in effect today. 3000 2250 1500 750 Last observation is January 2016 0 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Sources: Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Note: Through its quantitative easing (QE) programs, the Federal Reserve has significantly increased its security holdings from pre-Great Recession levels. Gray bars represent recessions. stlouisfed.org | 11 From November 2010 to June 2011, the Fed executed QE2—the purchase of $600 billion in long-term Treasury securities. This was followed by the “twist” program, from September 2011 to December 2012, under which the Fed sold short-term assets and purchased long-term assets, thus further lengthening the average maturity of the assets on its balance sheet. Finally, from September 2012 to October 2014, the Fed ran its QE3 program: a large-scale purchase of mortgagebacked securities and long-term Treasury securities. Figure 4 shows total securities held by the Fed, which increased by more than fivefold from before the Great Recession until now. Note the large increases in the quantity of securities that correspond to QE1, QE2 and QE3. What is not reflected in the figure is the increase in the average maturity of the Fed’s portfolio. For example, at the end of 2007, about one-third of the Fed’s securities were in the form of short-term Treasury bills, but the Fed now holds none of those assets. The large quantity of assets purchased by the Fed since 2008 had to be financed, of course, by an increase in the Fed’s liabilities. Figure 5 shows the stocks of currency in circulation, reserves held by financial institutions and reverse repurchase agreements (reverse F IGURE 5 Federal Reserve Liabilities 5250 Other 4500 Billions of U.S. dollars Reverse repurchase agreements 3750 Reserves Currency in circulation 2250 1500 750 Last observation is January 2016 0 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Sources: Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Note: The Federal Reserve’s asset purchases were balanced, in large part, by increases in reserves and reverse repurchase agreements. 12 | Annual Report 2015 What Is Monetary Policy Normalization? In the previous section, we detailed what has been unusual about the state of monetary policy in the United States—an abnormally long period of ZIRP, a very large Fed balance sheet, a Fed asset portfolio that is unusually long in maturity, and large holdings of MBS, which are essentially private assets. So, what will normalization entail? 8 A good outline of the Fed’s planned normalization approach was in its “Policy Normalization Principles and Plans,” presented in September 2014.9 Three key elements were in the normalization plan: 1. Begin increases in short-term market interest rates— trigger liftoff, that is, an end to ZIRP. (The FOMC took this step in December 2015.) 3000 2000 repos), which in total comprise essentially all Fed liabilities. The stock of currency has grown relatively smoothly since before the financial crisis, with a moderate increase during the crisis because of an increased appetite for safe U.S. currency in the world. But most of the increase in the Fed’s assets was reflected in a large increase in the stock of reserves. Before the financial crisis, in 2007, reserve balances were typically in the range of $5 billion to $10 billion, while the Jan. 27, 2016, level was about $2.4 trillion. From late 2008 to December 2015, reserves bore interest, albeit at a low interest rate of 0.25 percent. This interest rate was increased to 0.5 percent on Dec. 17, 2015, and is expected to continue to rise (probably at a slow rate) in the future. Interestbearing liabilities of the Fed also now include a substantial quantity of reverse repurchase agreements, which play a similar role to reserves, with some very important qualifications. Reverse repos will be discussed in more detail later in this article. 2. Reduce the size of the balance sheet so that monetary policy works as it did before the Great Recession. 3. Transform the Fed’s asset holdings to a composition similar to those of pre-Great Recession times. This transformation will involve a reduction in the average maturity of assets and a transition to a portfolio consisting primarily of Treasury securities. Some History of Unconventional Monetary Policy U nconventional monetary policy, in practice, has taken two primary forms: forward guidance and quantitative easing (QE). With respect to forward guidance, macroeconomists have understood, at least since the revolution in macroeconomics that took place in the 1970s, that monetary policy works better if it is predictable and if the public believes what central bankers say. Forward guidance assigns an important role not only to what a central bank is doing in the present but to what central bankers say about what they are going to do in the future. A historical example of forward guidance at work occurred during Paul Volcker’s term as Fed chairman, from 1979 to 1987. Volcker determined early in his term that the inflation rate was too high in the United States. He clearly announced Paul Volcker * his intentions to reduce inflation and specified how the Fed would do it. Although the disinflation that occurred in the early 1980s was costly— there was a severe recession in 1981-82—the costs were temporary. Indeed, a widely held concern before the disinflation was that high inflation expectations were so well-entrenched that disinflation would take much longer than what actually transpired. Part of the credit for the shortness of the disinflationary period was that Volcker’s statements were credible: People believed that he would actually do what he claimed he would do, and inflation expectations fell quickly as a result. Though forward guidance has been an important part of the Fed’s policy framework for a long time, it became increasingly important during and after the financial crisis. As evidence of this, for example, the FOMC’s statement of Feb. 2, 2005 (when Alan Greenspan was Fed chairman), was 262 words long, the statement of Jan. 27, 2010, was 547 words, and the *PHOTO SOURCE: BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE statement of Dec. 16, 2015, was 596 words. Clearly, the FOMC increasingly had much more to say, and the added words were primarily related to forward guidance. The second element of unconventional monetary policy—of key importance in the United States after the financial crisis—is QE, which was first discussed and implemented in 2001 by the Bank of Japan. This early experiment could probably be more appropriately categorized as conventional monetary policy, rather than unconventional policy. In 2001, Japan had been following ZIRP (zero-interest-rate policy) for about six years and was experiencing a deflation—consumer prices were falling. The Bank of Japan engaged at that time in purchases of large quantities of short-term government securities in an attempt to increase inflation, but to no avail as the deflation continued.7 What the Bank of Japan had discovered was the liquidity trap— with ZIRP in place, an open market purchase of shortterm government debt by the central bank should have no effect because zero-interest bank reserves are replacing zero-interest government debt in financial markets. QE, if it is to have the potential to work, must involve purchases by the central bank of unconventional assets—either long-term government debt (instead of short-term) or assets that are not liabilities of the government. After the financial crisis, some central banks started conducting genuine QE in earnest. The Fed made large purchases of long-term government debt and mortgage-backed securities, the Bank of England had a large QE program, Switzerland had a very large QE program and the European Central Bank is still engaged in an active QE program. stlouisfed.org | 13 Interest Rate Increases In normal times, prior to the Great Recession, the New York Fed would control the fed funds rate, according to the directive from the FOMC, through daily open market operations. Monetary economists would describe this as a variant of a channel system for monetary policy implementation. Under a channel system, a central bank sets an interest rate at which it lends to financial institutions (the discount rate in the U.S.) and an interest rate on reserve balances in excess of reserve requirements (IOER—interest on excess reserves), which is then the interest rate at which financial institutions lend to the central bank. Those two interest rates constitute, respectively, an upper bound on the overnight interest rate and a lower bound. In the U.S., no financial institution should want to borrow from another financial institution at an interest rate greater than the discount rate, nor would a financial institution lend at an interest rate less than F IGURE 6 Federal Funds Rate and Interest Rate on Excess Reserves 0.60 Percent per annum 0.50 0.40 0.30 IOER 0.20 Federal funds rate 0.10 Last observation is week of Jan. 20, 2016 0.00 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Sources: Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Note: While the interest rate on excess reserves should peg the federal funds rate, the latter rate has run consistently below the former. Many factors are argued by researchers as explanations for this interest rate gap. Such factors include regulatory costs associated with holding reserves for commercial banks, imperfect competition and the fact that government-sponsored enterprises do not receive interest on their reserve balances with the Fed. Shaded region represents recession. 14 | Annual Report 2015 the interest rate on reserves. Under a channel system, the central bank targets an overnight interest rate to fall between the upper and lower bounds. Prior to the Great Recession, the Fed operated under a channel system with IOER=0. When a central bank has a large quantity of excess interest-bearing reserves outstanding, monetary policy implementation works differently, as a floor system. In a smoothly functioning overnight credit market, with excess reserves outstanding, IOER should peg the overnight rate because market participants must be indifferent between lending to the central bank and lending to another financial institution overnight. If the U.S. overnight market worked this way, then liftoff would be an easy thing for the Fed to implement. An increase in the IOER would simply increase the fed funds rate one-for-one. But the U.S. overnight credit market is not a smoothly functioning market. Figure 6 shows the fed funds rate and the IOER since the beginning of 2009. As is evident from the figure, there is a significant gap between the IOER and the fed funds rate. There are several factors that, researchers have argued, explain this gap, including regulatory costs associated with holding reserves for commercial banks, imperfect competition and the fact that government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) do not receive interest on their reserve balances with the Fed.10 Because the gap is not well-understood, it is difficult to predict what will happen to this gap as market interest rates increase over time. As IOER increases, will the fed funds rate increase more or less in tandem? Will the interest rate margin between the IOER and the fed funds rate increase, or will it decrease? To deal with this problem, the New York Fed experimented with an ON-RRP (overnight reverse repurchase agreement) facility. Since liftoff, the facility has served as a way to restrict the rate gap. The ON-RRP facility has an expanded set of counterparties, including money market mutual funds and GSEs. In a reverse repurchase agreement, one of these counterparties lends to the Fed, usually overnight, with the Fed posting some securities in its portfolio as collateral. The goal of the ON-RRP facility is to expand the set of financial institutions that can hold interest-bearing Fed liabilities. Under the FOMC’s normalization plans, the FOMC will continue to set a 25-basis-point range for the fed funds rate, but with the IOER set at the top of the range and the ON-RRP rate at the bottom of the range. On a typical day, the New York Fed currently conducts a fixed-rate full-allotment auction of ON-RRP borrowing, that is, the New York Fed fixes the ON-RRP rate and lets the market determine the quantity of lending to the Fed at that rate. In principle, the ON-RRP interest rate should put a floor under the fed funds rate, with the IOER determining the ceiling on the fed funds rate. The system should then be a modified floor system—a floor with a subfloor—which will allow the Fed to tightly control the fed funds rate. As shown in Figure 7, the Fed has been successful at targeting the fed funds rate between the ON-RRP rate, currently at 0.25 percent, and IOER, currently at 0.5 percent. (The departure of the fed funds rate from the target range on Dec. 31 occurred because of temporary technical reasons that may recur at the end of each quarter and which are not important to monetary policy.) Balance Sheet Reduction and Transformation In the FOMC’s normalization plans, balance sheet reduction was projected to start taking place sometime after liftoff. Further, reduction will occur through the end of the reinvestment program; when reinvestment stops, the assets on the Fed’s balance sheet will mature over time, and the balance sheet will gradually shrink in size. In the process, reserves will fall; the target balance sheet size will have been achieved when reserves fall to a small amount, on the order of what was outstanding before the Great Recession. Balance sheet reduction could occur through outright sales of the Fed’s assets, but there are no plans for this. How do reserves fall as the Fed’s assets mature? Consider two possible cases. First, suppose that an MBS held by the Fed matures (either because the underlying mortgages mature, a mortgage holder refinances or a mortgage defaults), then the issuer of the MBS makes a payment to the Fed. Supposing that issuer is a GSE (Fannie Mae, for example), the Fed would then debit the reserve account of the GSE at the Fed by the amount of the payment. Effectively, the Fed tears up F IGURE 7 A Floor and a Subfloor for the Federal Funds Rate 0.60 IOER Percent per annum 0.50 0.40 Federal funds rate 0.30 ON-RRP rate 0.20 0.10 Last observation is Jan. 29, 2016 15 21 / 12 15 /2 3/ 1 12 5 /2 5/ 15 12 /2 7/ 15 12 /2 9/ 1 12 5 /3 1/ 15 1/ 2/ 16 1/ 4/ 16 1/ 6/ 16 1/ 8/ 16 1/ 10 /1 6 1/ 12 /1 6 1/ 14 /1 6 1/ 16 /1 6 1/ 18 /1 1/ 6 20 /1 6 1/ 22 /1 6 1/ 24 /1 6 1/ 26 /1 6 1/ 28 /1 6 9/ 12 / /1 12 12 /1 7/ 15 0.00 Sources: Federal Reserve Board and Haver Analytics. Note: While the IOER should peg the federal funds rate with such a large stock of reserves still outstanding, various economic factors have led to the latter rate running consistently below the former. The ON-RRP rate, because ON-RRPs are available to a larger set of financial institutions than the set able to hold interest-bearing reserves with the Fed, should function as a secondary floor. The ON-RRP rate and the IOER have successfully bounded the federal funds rate since liftoff. The only departure from the bounds, on Dec. 31, was because of technical reasons that are unimportant to monetary policy. (Such reasons also explain the sudden drop on Jan. 29.) stlouisfed.org | 15 Central Bank Balance Sheets A lthough a central bank has some special functions that make it different, in many ways it works as private banks do. For example, the Fed has a balance sheet, consisting of assets on one side of the balance sheet and liabilities on the other side. Basic accounting says that Assets = Liabilities + Capital where capital is just the net worth of the Fed, in an accounting sense. Part of what makes the Fed different from a private bank is that it can never be insolvent. Even if the Fed had negative net worth, it would not be technically insolvent because the Fed’s “liabilities,” consisting mainly of currency and bank reserves, are not promises to pay in the same sense as the liabilities of a private commercial bank, for example. In any case, the size of a bank’s balance sheet is the total value of its assets—or the total value of its liabilities, including capital, because the balance sheet must balance. In normal times, the size of the Fed’s balance sheet is determined essentially by the demand for U.S. currency in the world, as, for example, most of the Fed’s liabilities were currency before the financial crisis. For any central bank, the potential size of the balance sheet is limited only by the assets that the central bank can buy and by the demand for its liabilities. Thus, in principle, the balance sheet can get very large as the result of quantitative easing, as long as banks are willing to hold the reserves (liabilities) that the central bank issues to buy more assets. One useful measure of the size of a central bank’s balance sheet is the ratio of the value of its assets to gross domestic product (GDP), in percentage terms. By this measure, the balance sheet of the Fed is currently neither the largest nor the smallest in the world: In the third quarter of 2015, it was about 25 percent of GDP. Two small-balance-sheet countries are Canada (5 percent of GDP) and Australia (about 10 percent). Countries with central bank balance sheets about on a scale with that of the U.S. are the U.K. (about 20 percent) and Denmark (close to 30 percent). Finally, two countries whose central banks have very large balance sheets are Japan (close to 75 percent of GDP) and Switzerland (just short of 100 percent). 16 | Annual Report 2015 the IOU of the GSE to the Fed (the MBS), and the Fed tears up the IOU of the Fed to the GSE (reserves); so, there are equal reductions in the Fed’s assets and in its liabilities. If the asset that matures is a Treasury security, then what happens is a little less obvious. When the Treasury security matures, there is a payment from the Treasury to the Fed, which occurs through a debiting of the Treasury’s reserve account with the Fed. Again, there are equal reductions in the Fed’s assets and liabilities, but in this case there is no reduction in reserve balances held in the private sector, which is what we care about. Such a reduction would occur, for example, if the Treasury wanted to replenish its reserve balances after paying down its debt with the Fed. The Treasury could do this, for example, by issuing new Treasury securities to a private-sector financial institution, which pays for those securities with reserve balances. This would then increase the reserve balances of the Treasury but reduce reserve balances held in the private sector. The ultimate effects would then be the same as for the mortgage-backed security example. How long will the balance sheet take to normalize once reinvestment stops? Studies by economists within the Federal Reserve System suggest that this process could take seven years or more.11 It will take even longer to reduce the average maturity of the Fed’s assets to what it was before the Great Recession. And this is under the assumption that the Fed will not engage in more QE programs during the normalization process; so, potentially, normalization of the balance sheet could take a very long time. Why Normalize? As discussed above, the Fed’s monetary policy decisions are made in the context of the dual mandate, which comes from Congress. Normalization, if it is a good idea, should improve the Fed’s ability to achieve its 2 percent inflation goal and maximum employment in the future. There are strong arguments that normalization is indeed a good idea; those arguments typically take two different forms: the New Keynesian view and the Neo-Fisherian view. These two views Taylor Rule Specifics invoke the ideas of two highly prominent economists from the early 20th century, John Maynard Keynes and Irving Fisher. The actual Taylor rule used here takes the form The New Keynesian View *PHOTO: © GETTY IMAGES / BETTMANN / CONTRIBUTOR where R denotes the fed funds rate, π denotes the 12-month percentage change in the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) deflator, u is the unemployment rate and u* is the natural rate of unemployment, as measured by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). Thus, this estimated Taylor rule implies that, on average, during the period 1987:Q4–2007:Q4, the Fed increased the fed funds rate by 1.15 percentage points when the inflation rate increased by 1 percentage point and reduced the fed funds rate by 1.51 percentage points when the gap between the unemployment rate and the natural rate of unemployment (the CBO’s estimate of the short-run rate of unemployment) increased by 1 percentage point. F I GU R E 8 Federal Funds Rate versus Rate Predicted by Taylor Rule (1987:Q4 to 2007:Q4) 10 8 Percent per annum New Keynesian (NK) ideas are a synthesis of the modern macroeconomic ideas that have been introduced in the past 45 years and older Keynesian ideas. Modern macroeconomics has emphasized the use of economic theory in macroecoJohn Maynard Keynes* nomics, the role of forward-looking economic behavior and the importance of commitment by economic policymakers; older Keynesian ideas date back to Keynes’ General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money of 1936. NK economics was laid out in detail by Michael Woodford in 2003, and these NK ideas have been developed in the form of quantitative macroeconomic models that are widely used by central banks.12 In basic simplified New Keynesian macroeconomic models, there are three economic relationships: (i) an IS curve that describes the relationship between expected output growth and the short-term interest rate; (ii) a Phillips curve, capturing a positive relationship between aggregate economic activity and the rate of inflation; and (iii) a Taylor rule, which describes how the central bank chooses its target nominal interest rate in response to observed inflation and unemployment.13 Basically, the Taylor rule states that the Fed’s nominal interest rate target should increase when inflation rises relative to its target, and the target nominal interest rate should decrease if unemployment rises relative to the unemployment rate consistent with “full employment.” 14 This formally captures a policy rule reflecting the Fed’s dual mandate—under the Taylor rule, the Fed ultimately cares about hitting an inflation target (2 percent per year) and an unemployment rate target. Then, it changes its nominal interest rate target to move the economy as close as possible to its ultimate targets, in a well-defined sense. A Taylor rule actually fits reasonably well the historical behavior of the Fed. Figure 8 shows the fed funds rate, and the predictions of a Taylor rule fit to the data from 1987:Q4 to 2007:Q4. R = 2.16 + 1.15π – 1.51(u – u*) Federal funds rate 6 4 Predicted rate 2 0 1987 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 Sources: Federal Reserve Board, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Congressional Budget Office, Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) and author's calculations. Note: The Taylor rule is a rule for setting a central bank's target nominal interest rate, given unemployment and inflation. The federal funds rate predictions from our Taylor rule, estimated using data from 1987:Q4 to 2007:Q4, fit the behavior of the actual federal funds rate relatively well over this period. Shaded regions represent recessions. stlouisfed.org | 17 Figure 9 shows what would have happened if the Fed had behaved as it did during the period starting in 1987 and ending in 2007, when the Great Recession started. The figure shows the actual fed funds rate and the rate predicted by the Taylor rule, given the actual inflation rate and unemployment experienced from 2008 on. The Taylor rule predicts a negative fed funds rate for the period from the end of 2008 to the beginning of 2011. Because the fed funds rate cannot be negative, we can interpret this period as one in which the predicted fed funds rate is zero, given this Taylor rule. Thus, from late 2008 to early 2011, the Fed conformed to its previous behavior—if it could have achieved negative fed funds rates it would have done so, but this was not feasible. However, Figure 9 shows the fed funds rate predicted by the Taylor rule rising above the actual fed funds rate in early 2011. If the Fed had been behaving in a pre-Great Recession fashion, liftoff would have occurred in early 2011, and the fed funds rate would F IGURE 9 Federal Funds Rate versus Rate Predicted by Taylor Rule (2008:Q1 to 2015:Q4) 8 Percent per annum 6 4 2 Federal funds rate 0 -2 Predicted rate -4 -6 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Sources: Federal Reserve Board, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Congressional Budget Office, Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) and author's calculations. Note: According to our Taylor rule estimate using data from 1987:Q4 to 2007:Q4, we should have lifted off in 2011, and the federal funds rate should be above 2 percent. Shaded region represents recession. 18 | Annual Report 2015 currently be above 2 percent rather than where it is— in the range of 0.25-0.5 percent. Thus, an argument in favor of liftoff and normalization of monetary policy is: 1. Monetary policy in the period 1987-2007 was successful at achieving the Fed’s goals. Inflation was low and stable, and the recessions in 1990-1991 and in 2001 were relatively mild. Thus, conducting monetary policy as was done from 1987 to 2007 should produce good results. 2. The Great Recession may have been an extraordinary event, but if monetary policy had been conducted in the way it had been in the 1987-2007 period, then liftoff would have occurred in 2011. Thus, starting on the path to normalization in December 2015 was not premature—it was long overdue. A counterargument is that the Fed was very close in late 2015 to achieving its goals. Figure 10 shows the 12-month percentage increase in the PCE deflator and in the PCE deflator excluding food and energy prices (or core PCE). Although both of these measures had been below the Fed’s 2 percent target since early 2012, and the December 2015 measure for PCE inflation was 0.6 percent, we could argue that this recent low inflation was due to temporary factors— principally the large drop in oil prices that occurred in 2014 and into 2016. If we strip out food and energy prices, the core PCE shows 1.4 percent inflation for December, which is much closer to the 2 percent target. As well, the unemployment rate, at 5 percent for the last three months of 2015, was at the Congressional Budget Office’s estimate of the natural rate of unemployment. Further, a New Keynesian might argue, based on Phillips curve logic, that we should expect inflation to increase as the unemployment rate continues to fall. Thus, the Fed was very close in late 2015 to hitting its policy targets and should have come even closer in the immediate future without taking any policy action. According to this counterargument, we did not need to adhere to policies that worked in the past if current policy seemed to be doing fine. *PHOTO SOURCE: LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PCE Inflation Year-over-year percent change in price index The Neo-Fisherian view is based on the relationship between inflation and nominal interest rates. As an aid in understanding the basic forces at work, suppose I am considering whether to acquire a particular asset. If the nominal interest rate I will Irving Fisher * receive from holding the asset is R, and the inflation rate over the period I hold the asset is i, then the real interest rate, that is, the real rate of return I receive on the asset, is R – i. However, at the time I acquire the asset, I do not know what the future inflation rate will be. In making my decision, I will make a forecast of inflation, i e (my expected inflation rate) and base my decision about holding the asset on the expected real interest rate R – i e. Though there is sound macroeconomic theory and empirical evidence supporting the idea that monetary policy can affect real interest rates and real aggregate economic activity over the short run, that theory and empirical evidence also tell us that monetary policy has no effects on real interest rates in the long run. Therefore, for example, if the Fed lowers the nominal interest rate permanently, in the long run this will have the effect of leaving R – i and R – i e unchanged, that is, a permanent reduction in the nominal interest rate simply reduces the inflation rate and expected inflation by the same amount, in the long run. This is called the Fisher effect: High (low) nominal interest rates tend to be associated with high (low) inflation. Figure 11 shows a scatter plot of the 12-month inflation rate in the United States versus the fed funds rate for the period 1954-2015. In the figure, we can observe a strong positive correlation, consistent with the Fisher effect. Note the recent observations, since the end of 2008, when interest rates were very low; they are a cluster of points in the lower left of the scatter plot. Recognizing the Fisher effect as an important force helps us understand what is going on in episodes where ZIRP has persisted for a long time. For example, Japan has had ZIRP (or very close to ZIRP) for about 20 years and has also experienced an average inflation rate of about zero over that period. It should not be F I GU R E 1 0 3 PCE inflation 2% inflation target 2 1 Core PCE inflation 0 -1 Last observation is December 2015 -2 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Note: While inflation has continued to run below the 2 percent target over the past few years, the very low recent inflation rates can be attributed, in large part, to falling oil prices. Core inflation, which does not include food and energy prices, is much closer to the target. Shaded region represents recession. F I GU R E 1 1 PCE Inflation and the Federal Funds Rate (1954:Q4 to 2015:Q4) PCE price index, year-over-year percent change The Neo-Fisherian View 12.5 10.0 7.5 5.0 2.5 0 -2.5 0 2.5 5.0 7.5 10.0 12.5 15.0 17.5 Federal funds rate, percent per annum Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Note: Consistent with the Fisher effect, a higher interest rate tends to be associated with a higher inflation rate. Also, note the observations from the recent era of zero-interestrate policy, which form a cluster in the bottom left of the plot. stlouisfed.org | 19 F IGURE 12 PCE price index, year-over-year percent change PCE Inflation and the Unemployment Rate (2009:Q3 to 2015:Q4) 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 2015:Q4 0.5 0 -0.5 2009:Q3 -1.0 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5 8.0 8.5 9.0 9.5 10.0 Unemployment rate, percent Sources: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bureau of Labor Statistics and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). Note: While Phillips curve reasoning predicts that a tighter labor market (represented by a movement leftward in the plot because such a movement corresponds to a lower unemployment rate) will result in higher inflation, the recent period of labor market tightening has been associated with lower inflation. “The Great Recession may have been an extraordinary event, but if monetary policy had been conducted in the way it had been in the 1987-2007 period, then liftoff would have occurred in 2011. Thus, starting on the path to normalization in December 2015 was not premature—it was long overdue.” 20 | Annual Report 2015 surprising that inflation is low in the United States after seven years of ZIRP. Similarly, the low inflation and low nominal interest rates we currently see in the euro area, Switzerland, the U.K., Denmark and Sweden, among other countries, are consistent with a manifestation of the Fisher effect. Recall that a counterargument (earlier) to the New Keynesian view for normalization is that, under the monetary policy settings prior to mid-December, the Fed was close to achieving its goals, with the only problem being that inflation was a bit on the low side. Further, according to the counterargument, the Phillips curve tells us that additional tightening in the labor market should have caused inflation to increase. But how has the Phillips curve been doing lately? Figure 12 shows a post-Great Recession scatter plot of the inflation rate versus the unemployment rate for the United States, with the line joining the points in sequence, from 2009:Q3 on the far right to 2015:Q4 on the far left. Instead of a Phillips curve with a negative slope, what we have observed is a positively sloped Phillips curve. As unemployment has been falling, so has the inflation rate. It would, therefore, be surprising if the Phillips curve were to suddenly reassert itself (in the form of higher inflation) after this long period of falling unemployment and falling inflation, particularly in light of the long experience with ZIRP in Japan. While the Phillips curve is nonexistent in the recent U.S. data, it is also hard to find over other time periods and in other countries, as well. The Fisher effect, which we can see plainly in Figure 11, is a strong regularity across time periods and countries. An element of the Neo-Fisherian view is that, if ZIRP continues, it is very unlikely that we will see an increase in inflation—much more likely is the outcome in which the Fed continues to undershoot its 2 percent inflation target.15 This would be detrimental because predictable inflation is important for economic performance, as is the credibility of the Fed in delivering predictable inflation. Even though the Fisher effect determines the effect of nominal interest rates on inflation in the long run, what if an increase in the nominal interest rate, under liftoff, causes inflation to fall even further below the Glossary 2 percent inflation target in the short run? Some recent research suggests that, even in conventional, mainstream New Keynesian macroeconomic models, this does not happen. Work by economist John Cochrane shows that a permanent increase in the nominal interest rate should lead to an increase in the inflation rate even in the short run.16 The effect is less than one-forone initially and rises to one-for-one in the long run. Thus, Neo-Fisherism does not pertain to some peculiar set of macroeconomic models. In fact, conventional and widely used macroeconomic models have NeoFisherian properties. Conclusion After a long period of unconventional monetary policy, the Fed has embarked on a period of policy normalization, under which the fed funds rate target will ultimately return to normal levels, with the Fed’s balance sheet shrinking in size. Support for the Fed’s policy comes from both New Keynesian and Neo-Fisherian policy frameworks. Under the former framework, normalization is justified in that it forestalls excessive future inflation. Under the latter framework, normalization forestalls insufficient future inflation. In any case, the Fed’s announced plan is that normalization will continue for a considerable time, at a gradual pace, and in a manner that responds to macroeconomic events as they unfold. Research assistance was provided by Jonas Crews, a research analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Bagehot, Walter: a British journalist who often wrote about economics in the mid-1800s. Perhaps most notable among his books was Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market, in which he explained the worlds of banking and finance. Some of his ideas found their way into the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. For example, the Federal Reserve System was initially envisioned in the act as a means for the regional Federal Reserve banks to lend to banks in their districts, both in normal times and in emergencies. Channel system: a monetary policy system that involves controlling a key market interest rate by bounding it between two central bankcontrolled rates; the U.S. version of the channel system involves bounding the federal funds rate between the discount rate and the interest rate on excess reserves. Discount rate: the interest rate at which the Federal Reserve lends to financial institutions in its role as lender of last resort; this rate serves as the ceiling for a channel system. Federal funds rate: the interest rate at which financial institutions that have reserve accounts with the Fed lend to each other overnight. This lending is unsecured, that is, the borrower does not post collateral. Often referred to as the fed funds rate. Floor system: a monetary policy system that exists when there is a large quantity of excess interest-bearing reserves outstanding, implying that the interest rate on excess reserves will theoretically serve as a floor that pegs the federal funds rate. Forward guidance: the provision of promises by a central bank regarding its future actions, which, if deemed credible, can adjust people’s views of the future and influence their economic activities; an example is the promise to hold the federal funds rate near zero for an extended period of time. Interest rate on excess reserves (IOER): the interest rate received on reserves held at the Federal Reserve in excess of an institution’s reserve requirement; this rate serves as the floor in both a channel system and a floor system. Liftoff: the date at which the Fed raised the fed funds rate after seven years at practically zero. The FOMC took this action—the start of so-called normalization of monetary policy—on Dec. 16, 2015. Liquidity trap: a situation in which an open market purchase of short-term government securities by the central bank increases the money supply but has no effect on market interest rates or any other economic variables. Mortgage-backed security (MBS): a tradeable security backed by a bundle of private mortgages. CONTINUED ON PAGE 22 PHOTO: © GETTY IMAGES / HULTON ARCHIVE / STRINGER stlouisfed.org | 21 Glossary CONTINUED FROM PAGE 21 ENDNOTES Neo-Fisherism: an economic doctrine that recognizes the Fisher effect—the positive effect of the nominal interest rate on inflation in the long run. Under Neo-Fisherian monetary policy, the central bank increases interest rates to increase inflation. 1 See Bagehot. New Keynesianism: a synthesis of ideas from John Maynard Keynes (Old Keynesianism) and the post-1970 revolution in macroeconomics. In New Keynesian theory, the Phillips curve (a negative relationship between inflation and unemployment) is important. Open market operations: the purchase (sale) of U.S. government securities, generally Treasury securities, from (to) financial institutions on the open market in order to increase (decrease) total reserves, therefore lowering (raising) the federal funds rate by influencing the supply of reserves available to be lent; these transactions serve as a way to effectively control the federal funds rate in a channel system. Overnight reverse repurchase agreement: see reverse repurchase agreement below. PCE deflator: a measure of the average level of prices in the economy, derived from aggregate consumer spending. The rate of change in the PCE (personal consumption expenditures) deflator is the key measure of inflation used by the Fed. Quantitative easing: the purchase of unconventional, long-term assets (for example, mortgage-backed securities and long-term Treasury securities) by a central bank in order to directly reduce long-term interest rates. Reserve requirement: the share of certain types of deposits that must be held in the form of reserves with the Fed by a depository institution. 2 Unconventional monetary policies are discussed in more detail in Williamson, 2014. 3 See Woodford’s 2012 work. 4 See the June 2009 FOMC statement. 5 See March 2014 FOMC statement. 6 1951 marks the accord between the U.S. Treasury and the Fed that set up the modern institutional framework for monetary policy in the United States. 7 The Bank of Japan did increase long-term government bond purchases, but the size of the increase was quite small in comparison to more recent QE programs. 8 See Williamson’s 2015 work “Monetary Policy Normalization in the United States” for further discussion of the normalization process. 9 See the FOMC’s 2014 “Policy Normalization Principles and Plans.” 10 See Martin, McAndrews, Palida and Skeie, as well as Williamson’s 2015 work titled “Interest on Reserves, Interbank Lending, and Monetary Policy,” for examinations of imperfect competition as an explanation for the interest rate gap. Also, an example of a GSE is the Federal National Mortgage Association, generally referred to as Fannie Mae. 11 See Williamson’s 2015 work titled “Monetary Policy Normalization in the United States.” Reverse repurchase agreement (RRP): the borrowing of funds by a central bank from a financial institution, generally overnight (ON-RRP), with central bank-owned securities held by the financial institution as collateral until the funds are returned; this monetary policy tool serves as a way to expand the set of institutions that can hold interest-bearing Federal Reserve liabilities. The ON-RRP rate serves as a subfloor under the IOER (see above) in the U.S. floor system. Often referred to as reverse repos. 12 See Woodford’s 2003 work. Zero-interest-rate policy (ZIRP): a monetary policy in which the central bank’s key interest rate is held near zero; this policy represents the limit of conventional monetary policy because, once such a policy is enacted, open market operations cannot lower overnight interest rates. 15 See Bullard. 22 | Annual Report 2015 13 See Clarida, GalÍ and Gertler for an example of a New Keynesian model. Also, the NK Phillips curve is actually a relationship between an “output gap” and the rate of inflation, but for our purposes we will take the unemployment rate as a measure of the output gap. 14 See Taylor. 16 See Cochrane. REFERENCES Bagehot, Walter. Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market. London, U.K.: H.S. King, 1873. Bullard, James. “Permazero as a Possible Medium-Term Outcome for the U.S. and the G-7.” Presentation at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Dec. 4, 2015. See https://www.stlouisfed.org/~/media/Files/ PDFs/Bullard/remarks/Bullard-Phil-Fed-Policy-Forum4Dec2015.pdf. Clarida, Richard; Galí, Jordi; and Gertler, Mark. “The Science of Monetary Policy: A New Keynesian Perspective.” Journal of Economic Literature, 1999, Vol. 37, No. 4, pp. 1,661-1,707. See http://www.nyu.edu/econ/user/ gertlerm/science.pdf. Cochrane, John. “Do Higher Interest Rates Raise or Lower Inflation?” Unpublished manuscript, University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Oct. 24, 2015. See http:// faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john.cochrane/research/ papers/fisher.pdf. Federal Open Market Committee. Statement. June 24, 2009. See http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/ press/monetary/20090624a.htm. Federal Open Market Committee. Statement. March 19, 2014. See http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/ press/monetary/20140319a.htm. Federal Open Market Committee. “Policy Normalization Principles and Plans.” Sept. 17, 2014. See http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/ monetary/20140917c.htm. Friedman, Milton; and Schwartz, Anna. A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1963. Keynes, John M. The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money. London, U.K.: Macmillan, 1936. Martin, Antoine; McAndrews, James; Palida, Ali; and Skeie, David. “Federal Reserve Tools for Managing Rates and Reserves.” Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Reports, September 2013, No. 642. See https://www. newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/research/staff_ reports/sr642.pdf. Taylor, John. “Discretion Versus Policy Rules in Practice.” Carnegie-Rochester Series on Public Policy, 1993, Vol. 39, pp. 195-214. See https://web.stanford.edu/~johntayl/ Papers/Discretion.PDF. Williamson, Stephen. “Monetary Policy in the United States: A Brave New World?” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, 2014, Vol. 96, No. 2, pp. 111-122. See https://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/ review/2014/q2/williamson.pdf. Williamson, Stephen. “Monetary Policy Normalization in the United States.” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, 2015, Vol. 97, No. 2, pp. 87-108. See https:// research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/2015/q2/ Williamson.pdf. Williamson, Stephen. “Interest on Reserves, Interbank Lending, and Monetary Policy,” Working Paper 2015024a, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, September 2015. See https://research.stlouisfed.org/wp/2015/2015024.pdf. Woodford, Michael. Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2003. Woodford, Michael. “Methods of Policy Accommodation at the Interest-Rate Lower Bound.” Presented at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Economic Symposium, “The Changing Policy Landscape,” Jackson Hole, Wyo., Aug. 31, 2012. See http://www.columbia.edu/~mw2230/ JHole2012final.pdf. stlouisfed.org | 23 E KE R VE RI KA N KA Our Work. Our People. 69 NDIANA R TE R IV ER VE W HI 74 Our mission is to promote stable prices, encourage maximum sustainable economic growth and support financial stability. We approach this mission from a variety of directions. Indianapolis 74 65 mfield Greene Bedford Lawrence Jackson Louisville Harrison Martin Switzerland Jefferson Vevay Scottsburg Gallatin Daviess Scott Carroll French Lick Washington ClarkER Trimble V Orange RI Owen IO Greenville Dubois Henry e OH Oldham kland City Floyd Shelby Crawford Franklin Jefferson ck Santa Claus Frankfort Perry Laconia er c Spencer n e Anderson Bullitt Sp Meade Nelson Hancock Bardstown Mercer Breckinridge Owensboro Hardin Washington ess Lexington IN KENTUCKY G rue hlenberg e yl Marion UC KY R IV ER All numbers are as of Dec. 31, 2015. Bo RL a VE RI Ohio The numbers that follow provide a glimpse of our work and our people NT over the past year. KE LL RO ean For example, our economists conduct regional, national and international economic research. Other staff members supervise financial institutions to help ensure their safety and soundness. Financial services are provided to the District’s banks and to the U.S. Treasury to keep the nation’s payment system running efficiently. The Bank develops financial and economic education curricula and programs for pre-K through college and beyond. The St. Louis Fed also works within communities to foster innovation and partnerships in community development. Campbellsville Grayson Taylor Butler Munfordville Green Casey Edmonson Hart Metcalfe CUM BER Adair Warren 65 LAN D RI Bowling Green VER Russell Barren Logan Wayne Cumberland 75 odd Russellville Burkesville Monticello Allen Simpson Monroe Clinton n 81 ashville CUMBERLAND RIVER NNESSEE 24 | Annual Report 2015 65 75 1,212 128 employees, the majority of them at the District’s headquarters in St. Louis and most of the rest at the three branches, in Little Rock, Ark., Louisville, Ky., and Memphis, Tenn. 1.1 Supervisor of state-chartered banks, as well as bank and savings and loan holding companies. 522 billion singles, fives, tens and other currency notes were inspected to ensure fitness for circulation — 128,480 pounds of which were no longer fit and shredded. As fiscal agent to the U.S. Treasury and its Do Not Pay program, the St. Louis Fed helped federal agencies identify $7,260,123 of improper payments, helping eliminate payment error, waste, fraud and abuse. The call-in and in-person information sessions hosted by the St. Louis Fed on recent financial and regulatory developments attracted a total audience of more than bankers, regulators and other industry participants. 15,000 3,299 pieces of currency were removed from circulation by the Bank because they were suspected of being counterfeit. stlouisfed.org | 25 Our economic database—Federal Reserve Economic Data, better known as FRED®—grew to data series, available free of charge to all. 294,000 The St. Louis Fed’s economic research division was ranked: No. 5 No. 31 No. 53 among research departments at all central banks around the world; among all research institutions around the U.S.; and among all research institutions around the world. 709,000 459,975 enrollments in the Bank’s online economic education courses 26 | Annual Report 2015 194 People from used FRED in 2015. countries 2 million items of economic research from around the world that anyone can access at any time for free via IDEAS, the world’s largest bibliographic database dedicated to economics IDEAS is a RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) service hosted by the research division of the St. Louis Fed. students were reached through educators who attended our economic education programs. 40.7 million pageviews of the St. Louis Fed’s websites (start at stlouisfed.org) 177,719 pageviews of our St. Louis Fed On the Economy blog 55,094 followers on Twitter @stlouisfed 35,161 subscribers to our online and print publications 92,934 pageviews of The FRED Blog 12,579 people signed up for 41 workshops, conferences, speeches and other events sponsored by our community development department. 465 people attended Dialogue with the Fed events, our evening lecture series for the public. 12,700 people visited the Inside the Economy® Museum at the St. Louis Fed in its first full year of operation. The museum received the Association of Midwest Museums’ 2015 Best Practices Award. stlouisfed.org | 27 More than 10,000 people across the country signed up for the new myRA (My Retirement Account), which the U.S. Treasury Department launched in late 2015 with the help of the St. Louis Fed’s Treasury Relations and Support Office. Our financial literacy campaign interacted with 100 percent of the 240 inner-city, majorityminority and girls high schools within the Eighth District. 12,723 127 people attended sponsored by our public speakers bureau. presentations $211,920 donated by employees to the United Way of Greater St. Louis. 180 tons of various kinds of waste that in the past would have gone to landfills were recycled or composted. 28 | Annual Report 2015 $33,300 raised by employees to help support food banks and feeding programs for the needy in the St. Louis area. 27,630 hours spent by internal auditors reviewing St. Louis Fed operations. THE 9I 2B 7G 12L 8H 11K ILLINOIS 3C 4D 10J ST. LOUIS 1A 5E INDIANA Eighth District–8H LOUISVILLE BOARD OF GOVERNORS KENTUCKY MISSOURI 6F ARKANSAS LITTLE ROCK The Eighth Federal Reserve District is composed of four zones, each of which is centered around one of the four cities where our offices are located: St. Louis (headquarters), Little Rock, Louisville and Memphis. Nearly 15 million people live in the Eighth Federal Reserve District. TENNESSEE MEMPHIS MISSISSIPPI Louisville—Churchill Downs Little Rock—Clinton Presidential Center Memphis—Orpheum Theatre stlouisfed.org | 29 VE Jefferson W Gibson Oakland City Crawford Harrison Franklin Jefferson R Mount Vernon Washington Marissa Monroe Edw I Oldham Floyd Shelby Louisville Jefferson RI De Soto RA Hamilton Posey Warrick Santa Claus Frankfor Perry Laconia Vanderburgh er Randolph c E Spencer Ande M Evansville en Bullitt Franklin M Omaha Sp rawford Washington Meade Nelson Ste. ISSIS Royalton Hancock Genevieve SIPP Bardstown M Breckinridge IR Farmington Gallatin Henderson Owensboro Hardin IV Washington Saline Jackson ER Daviess Williamson Perry St. Francois Iron Union Stonefort Marion McLean Hardin Webster Union Centerville Johnson Pope t Cape Ohio Madison Girardeau Campbellsvil Grayson Providence Crittenden Reynolds Cape Girardeau Hopkins Taylor Munfordville Butler Pulaski Massac Green Bollinger Muhlenberg Edmonson Hart Ca Fredonia ce Caldwell Wayne Adair Warren 65 Scott Ballard Crofton Lyon Bowling Green McCracken Russel nnon Barren Logan Sikeston Carter Trigg Christian Cumberland Carlisle Benton Poplar Bluff Stoddard Todd Russellville Marshall Burkesville Mon Graves Allen Simpson Butler Monroe Clinton egon Ripley Calloway Wingo New Fulton Madrid Maynard Cottage Grove Union City Clay Obion Randolph Weakley Henry CUMBERLAND RIVER Greene Nashville Benton Pemiscot Rutherford p Walnut Ridge Dunklin Dyer Gibson Carroll Lawrence Blytheville Halls Jonesboro Mississippi Crockett nce Craighead Lauderdale Madison Henderson Haywood Poinsett Newport Jackson Brownsville Marked Tree Jackson Tipton Chester Cross 65 Shelby McCrory Bolivar Fayette Crittenden Hardin McNairy Woodruff Hardeman Forrest City e St. Francis Benton De Soto R Alcorn VE Tippah RI Lee R Marshall E AT Blue Mountain W LD Tate Monroe Prentiss On the following pages are board members from each of the four O Tunica C Helena Abbeville offices of the St. Louis Fed: St. Louis, Little Rock, Ark., Louisville, Panola Phillips Union Lafayette Ky., and Memphis, Tenn. Members of our advisory councils are also Jonestown Tupelo rkansas C ME Perry White RO LL G IN Hickman VER TENNESSE E RIVER Chicot Hollandale Sunflower Washington Benoit Calhoun Chickasaw Calhoun City Webster Clay Montgomery Starkville Morgan City Carroll Choctaw Oktibbeha Lowndes Leflore G BI Holmes Lexington K AC BL Jackson 30 | Annual Report 2015 R VE RI Attala Louisville Noxubee Winston 20 TENNESSEE RIVER listed, as are officers of the Bank. (All lists are current as of April 8, 2016.) Finally, we salute those board members and advisory council members who have retired recently. Monroe Grenada Humphreys Bolivar ello ISSISSIPPI R IVE ISS IPP IR MIS S Desha Tallahatchie Itawamba R MI VE RI Yalobusha Charleston Lee TENNESSEE Tishomingo Decatur Lake ER IE SS ISS IP PI RIV H TC HA k Pontotoc Metcalfe Livingston Mississippi RI SEE NES TEN The Federal Reserve’s decentralized structure— the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C., and 12 independent Reserve banks around the country—ensures that the economic conditions of communities and industries across the map are taken into account in deciding monetary policy. The members of our boards of directors and our advisory councils are among the many voices of “Main Street” that we listen to. In addition, the St. Louis board provides governance oversight of management and approves management’s allocation of resources to the Bank’s activities. Memphis Coahoma Quitman Our Leaders. Our Advisers. rue Alexander RL a VE RI KENTUC Chair’s Message A s the chair of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, I take a keen interest in the Bank’s decisions and actions. During my time serving on the board of directors, I have had the privilege of seeing first-hand how passionate the St. Louis Fed is about excellence through its commitment to service, its business planning and its quality, efficient operations. I also appreciate the Bank on another level—the same level that those of you reading this can appreciate it and the same way that I will after my term on the board concludes—as an everyday consumer and citizen. That appreciation can be summed up in one word: confidence. What I mean is that as we go about our daily lives, we can have confidence that the money we work hard to earn will maintain its value because an organization like the Federal Reserve is working diligently to foster a healthy, stable economy. The regional structure of the Fed, with 12 banks located in all parts of the nation, ensures that the economic conditions of “Main Street”—communities and industries from all regions of the country—are taken into account in monetary policy decision-making. Here in the Eighth District, our voice is well-represented by St. Louis Fed President James Bullard. The St. Louis Fed serves a variety of constituents in supporting five areas outlined in the Bank’s mission: Finally, my experience on the board gives me confidence because I know that the staff members of the St. Louis Fed—whether they work in St. Louis, Little Rock, Louisville or Memphis—perform their duties with an ideal blend of discipline and innovation. The passion for excellence that I mentioned previously shines through in both the attitude and performance of the Bank’s employees. I am proud to say that when it comes to the St. Louis Fed and its contributions to a healthy economy and a stable financial system, confidence is high. Kathleen M. Mazzarella Chair of the Board of Directors Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis • advancing monetary policy focused on low inflation; • performing effectively as the fiscal agent and depository of the U.S. Treasury; • fostering safe and responsible banking practices; • providing beneficial regional economic research, community development programs, and economic and financial education; and • providing and promoting efficient, reliable and accessible payment services. Mazzarella is chairman, president and CEO of Graybar Electric Co. Inc. PHOTO COURTESY GRAYBAR ELECTRIC CO. stlouisfed.org | 31 St. Louis B OA R D O F D I R E C TO R S D. Bryan Jordan Chairman, President and CEO, First Horizon National Corp. Memphis, Tenn. Daniel J. Ludeman President and CEO, Concordance Academy of Leadership St. Louis CHAIR DEPUTY CHAIR Kathleen M. Mazzarella Chairman, President and CEO, Graybar Electric Co. Inc. St. Louis Suzanne Sitherwood President and CEO, The Laclede Group St. Louis Patricia L. Clarke President and CEO, First National Bank of Raymond Raymond, Ill. Cal McCastlain Partner, Dover Dixon Horne PLLC Little Rock, Ark. John N. Roberts III President and CEO, J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc. Lowell, Ark. Susan S. Stephenson Co-Chairman and President, Independent Bank Memphis, Tenn. In June 2015, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard toured tech startups in St. Louis before addressing the Emerging Venture Leaders Summit. 32 | Annual Report 2015 Little Rock B OA R D O F D I R E C TO R S Ray C. Dillon President and CEO, Deltic Timber Corp. El Dorado, Ark. Michael A. Cook Senior Vice President and Assistant Treasurer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Bentonville, Ark. Keith Glover President and CEO, Producers Rice Mill Inc. Stuttgart, Ark. Robert Martinez Owner, Rancho La Esperanza De Queen, Ark. Charles G. Morgan Jr. President and CEO, Relyance Bank N.A. Pine Bluff, Ark. Karama Neal COO, Southern Bancorp Community Partners Little Rock, Ark. CHAIRMAN Mark White President and CEO, Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield Little Rock, Ark. Robert Hopkins Regional Executive, Little Rock Branch, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis At the University of Arkansas-Fort Smith in November 2015, President Bullard spoke about monetary policy at an event for the community before he, Robert Hopkins and other Fed executives toured the university’s Baldor Technology Center. stlouisfed.org | 33 Louisville B OA R D O F D I R E C TO R S CHAIR Susan E. Parsons CFO, Secretary and Treasurer, Koch Enterprises Inc. Evansville, Ind. Alice K. Houston President, HoustonJohnson Inc. Louisville, Ky. Ben Reno-Weber Project Director, The Greater Louisville Project Louisville, Ky. Malcolm Bryant President, The Malcolm Bryant Corp. Owensboro, Ky. Mary K. Moseley President and CEO, Al J. Schneider Co. Louisville, Ky. David P. Heintzman Chairman and CEO, Stock Yards Bank & Trust Co. Louisville, Ky. Randy W. Schumaker President, Logan Aluminum Inc. Russellville, Ky. Nikki R. Jackson Regional Executive, Louisville Branch, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis On a visit to New Albany, Ind., and Louisville in March 2016, President Bullard, Nikki Jackson and other Fed executives toured an industrial park on the site of an old Army ammo plant and met with regional economic leaders. 34 | Annual Report 2015 Memphis B OA R D O F D I R E C TO R S CHAIR Carolyn Chism Hardy President and CEO, Chism Hardy Investments LLC Collierville, Tenn. J. Brice Fletcher Chairman, First National Bank of Eastern Arkansas Forrest City, Ark. Michael E. Cary President and CEO, Carroll Bank and Trust Huntingdon, Tenn. David T. Cochran Jr. Partner, CoCo Planting Co. Avon, Miss. Roy Molitor Ford Jr. Vice Chairman and CEO, Commercial Bank and Trust Co. Memphis, Tenn. Julianne Goodwin Owner, Express Employment Professionals Tupelo, Miss. Eric D. Robertson President, Community LIFT Corp. Memphis, Tenn. Douglas Scarboro Regional Executive, Memphis Branch, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Civic leaders gathered at the Economic Club in Memphis in January 2016 to hear President Bullard, after which he, Douglas Scarboro and others from the Fed toured a business incubator specializing in digital startups. stlouisfed.org | 35 Industry Councils Council members represent a wide range of Eighth District industries and businesses and periodically report on economic conditions to help inform monetary policy deliberations. Agribusiness Council Health Care Council Meredith B. Allen President and CEO, Staple Cotton Cooperative Association Greenwood, Miss. Mike Castellano CEO, Esse Health St. Louis Cecil C. “Barney” Barnett Chairman, Algood Food Co. Louisville, Ky. John Rodgers Brashier Vice President, Consolidated Catfish Producers LLC Isola, Miss. Cynthia Edwards Deputy Secretary, Arkansas Agriculture Department Little Rock, Ark. Sam Fiorello COO and Senior Vice President of the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, and President of the Bio Research & Development Growth Park St. Louis Edward O. Fryar Jr. CEO and Founder, Ozark Mountain Poultry Rogers, Ark. Dana Huber Vice President, Marketing/Public Relations, Huber’s Orchard, Winery & Vineyards Borden, Ind. 36 | Annual Report 2015 Cynthia Crone Faculty Instructor, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, College of Public Health, Department of Health Policy and Management Little Rock, Ark. June McAllister Fowler Senior Vice President, Communications and Marketing, BJC HealthCare St. Louis Diana Han Chief Medical Officer, GE Appliances & Lighting Louisville, Ky. Lisa M. Klesges Founding Dean and Professor, School of Public Health, University of Memphis Memphis, Tenn. Susan L. Lang CEO, HooPayz.com St. Louis Jason M. Little President and CEO, Baptist Memorial Health Care Corp. Memphis, Tenn. Wayne Hunt President, H&R Agri-Power Hopkinsville, Ky. Robert “Bo” Ryall President and CEO, Arkansas Hospital Association Little Rock, Ark. Ted Longacre CEO, Mesa Foods LLC Louisville, Ky. Alan Wheatley President, Retail Segment, Humana Louisville, Ky. Tania Seger Vice President, North America Finance, Monsanto Co. St. Louis Anthony Zipple President and CEO, Seven Counties Services Inc. Louisville, Ky. Montgo Columbia Callaway R IVE R RI U SO MIS Moniteau O’Fallon Warren St. Ch Jefferson City Osage Miller Osage Beach Camden Real Estate Council Bryan Day Executive Director, Little Rock Port Authority Little Rock, Ark. Dade Katherine A. Deck Director, Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Arkansas Fayetteville, Ark. Michael D. Garriga Executive Director of State Government Affairs, BNSF Railway Lawrence Memphis, Tenn. Martin Edwards Jr. President, Edwards Management Inc., Realtors Memphis, Tenn. E RIV Laclede Farmi Iron Licking Centerville Dent Reynolds Texas Webster Eminence Wright Christian Douglas D Rolla Crawford Washingt Phelps Greene Springfield VE RI Pulaski Bolivar Dallas Polk Rhonda Hamm-Niebruegge Director of Airports, Lambert Barry International Airport Cassville St. Louis E EC AM R ME R ON SC GA Lebanon Mark A. Bentley Principal, Managing Director, Central Arkansas, Colliers International Little Rock, Ark. Franklin J R Maries AD Transportation Council Gasconade MISSOURI Cole Shannon Mountain View Carter P Howell Stone Branson Taney Oregon Ozark Ripley Bakersfield David L. Hardy Managing Director, CBRE | Louisville Louisville, Ky. David Keach President and CEO, Gateway Truck Bentonville & Refrigeration Benton Collinsville, Ill. Janet Horlacher Principal and Executive Vice President, Janet McAfee Inc. St. Louis Fayetteville Mike McCarthy President, TerminalWashington Railroad Madison Association of St. Louis St. Louis Larry K. Jensen President and CEO, Cushman & Wakefield | Commercial Advisors Memphis, Tenn. Mark L. McCloud Newport Franklin Clinton Johnson Crawford Chief Financial Officer, UPS Airlines Marke Van Buren Jackson Clarksville Cleburne Louisville, Ky. Pope Fort Smith Cros Judy R. McReynolds Conway McCrory Searcy Logan Chairman, President and CEO, Faulkner Sebastian White Booneville ArcBest Corp. Woodruff Fort Smith, Ark. Perryville Yell F Prairie St. Fr Perry Pulaski Lonoke RIVER Scott AFAYE CHE L FOUR Lee Saline Montgomery Garland Monroe Polk Helen Hot Springs Phillip Jefferson Arkansas Hot Spring Wickes Grant Pike Pine Bluff Co Baxter Marion May Fulton Randolph Horseshoe Bend Sharp Izard Jasper Newton Searcy Waln Mountain View Stone Independence Lawrence Cra Little Rock ARKANSAS Hempstead Nevada Camden Texarkana Miller Ouachita Magnolia Columbia R IVE ISS IPP IR IVE Lincoln R Desha Bolivar Calhoun Bradley Fountain Hill El Dorado Union Monticello Benoit Drew Ashley Chicot Hollandale stlouisfed.org | 37 Washington 30 Dallas Rison Cleveland SA SR MIS S Clark VER Foreman Little River Murfreesboro KA N A RI CHIT OUA Sevier AR Arkadelphia Lafayette Lester T. Sanders Realtor, Semonin Realtors Louisville, Ky. Howard Gregory J. Kozicz President and CEO, Alberici Corp. St. Louis Eureka Springs Carroll Boone Community Depository Institutions Advisory Council Glenn D. Barks, Chairman President and CEO, First Community Credit Union Chesterfield, Mo. Jeffrey L. Lynch President and CEO, Eagle Bank and Trust Little Rock, Ark. Jeffrey Dean Agee President and CEO, First Citizens National Bank Dyersburg, Tenn. Elizabeth G. McCoy President and CEO, Planters Bank Hopkinsville, Ky. The members meet twice a year to advise the St. Louis Fed’s president on the credit, banking and economic conditions facing their institutions and communities. The council’s chair also meets twice a year in Washington, D.C., with the Federal Reserve chair and governors. Kevin Beckemeyer President and CEO, Legence Bank Eldorado, Ill. Dennis McIntosh President and CEO, Ozarks Federal Savings and Loan Farmington, Mo. Shaun Burke President and CEO, Guaranty Bank Springfield, Mo. Eric R. Olinger President, Freedom Bancorp Huntingburg, Ind. Karen Harbin President and CEO, Commonwealth Credit Union Frankfort, Ky. Ann Cowley Wells Chair and Co-CEO, Commonwealth Bank and Trust Company Louisville, Ky. John D. Haynes Sr. President and CEO, Farmers & Merchants Bank Baldwyn, Miss. Charles Horton President and CEO, Fidelity National Bank West Memphis, Ark. 38 | Annual Report 2015 John Bucy Executive Director, Northwest Tennessee Development District Martin, Tenn. Kenneth Robinson President/CEO, United Way of the Mid-South Memphis, Tenn. Terrance Clark Co-Founder, Thrive Helena, Ark. Keith Sanders Executive Director, The Lawrence and Augusta Hager Educational Foundation Owensboro, Ky. Rex Duncan Executive Director, Champion Community Investments Carbondale, Ill. Brian Fogle President and CEO, Community Foundation of the Ozarks Springfield, Mo. Andy Fraizer Executive Director, Indiana Association for Community Economic Development Indianapolis, Ind. Rita Green Assistant Professor, Mississippi State University Mississippi State, Miss. Ben Joergens Assistant Vice President and Financial Empowerment Officer, Old National Bank Evansville, Ind. Christie McCravy Executive Director, Louisville Affordable Housing Trust Fund Louisville, Ky. Margaret S. Sherraden Founders Professor, University of Missouri-St. Louis; Research Professor, Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis Community Development Advisory Council The council keeps the St. Louis Fed’s president and staff informed about community development in the Eighth District and suggests ways for the Bank to support local development efforts. Sarina Strack Senior Vice President and Director of Compliance, Midwest Bank Centre St. Louis Deborah Temple Senior Manager, Entrepreneurship, Communities Unlimited Inc. Pine Bluff, Ark. Amy Whitehead Director, Community Development Institute and Center for Community and Economic Development, University of Central Arkansas Conway, Ark. Cassandra Williams Vice President and Regional Branch Administrator, Hope Federal Credit Union Memphis, Tenn. Debra Moore Director of Administration, St. Clair County, Ill. Belleville, Ill. Martie North Senior Vice President, Director of Community Development/CRA, Simmons First National Bank Little Rock, Ark. stlouisfed.org | 39 Federal Advisory Council Representative The council is composed of one representative from each of the 12 Federal Reserve districts. Members confer with the Fed’s Board of Governors at least four times a year on economic and banking developments and make recommendations on Fed System activities. Ronald J. Kruszewski Chairman and CEO, Stifel Financial Corp. St. Louis Retirees F RO M T H E B OA R D S OF DIRECTORS AND ADVISORY COUNCILS We express our gratitude to those members of the boards of directors and of our advisory councils who retired over the previous year. From the Boards of Directors St. Louis William E. Chappel Sonja Yates Hubbard George Paz Rakesh Sachdev Little Rock Ronald B. Jackson Louisville Jon A. Lawson Memphis Lisa McDaniel Hawkins Charlie E. Thomas III From the Industry Councils Real Estate Chuck Kavanaugh Chuck Quick Lynn B. Schenck Transportation Thomas Gerstle James G. Powers Paul Wellhausen 40 | Annual Report 2015 From the Community Depository Institutions Advisory Council Carolyn “Betsy” Flynn Greg Ikemire Larry W. Myers Frank M. Padak Steve Stafford From the Community Development Advisory Council David C. Howard Jr. Joe Neri Eric Robertson Elizabeth Trotter Keith Turbett Johanna Wharton Bank Management Committee James Bullard President and CEO David A. Sapenaro First Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Karl W. Ashman Senior Vice President Karen L. Branding Senior Vice President Cletus C. Coughlin Senior Vice President and Chief of Staff to the President Nikki R. Jackson Vice President and Regional Executive, Louisville Branch Mary H. Karr Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary Kathleen O’Neill Paese Executive Vice President Julie L. Stackhouse Executive Vice President Christopher J. Waller Executive Vice President and Director of Research stlouisfed.org | 41 Bank Officers 42 | Annual Report 2015 James B. Bullard President and CEO Timothy C. Brown Vice President David A. Sapenaro First Vice President and COO Marilyn K. Corona Vice President Kathleen O’Neill Paese Executive Vice President Timothy R. Heckler Vice President Julie L. Stackhouse Executive Vice President Anna M. Helmering Hart Vice President Christopher J. Waller Executive Vice President Roy A. Hendin Vice President Karl W. Ashman Senior Vice President Amy C. Hileman Vice President Karen L. Branding Senior Vice President Debra E. Johnson Vice President Cletus C. Coughlin Senior Vice President James A. Price Vice President Mary H. Karr Senior Vice President B. Ravikumar Vice President Michael D. Renfro Senior Vice President Katrina L. Stierholz Vice President Matthew W. Torbett Senior Vice President Donny J. Trankler Vice President Robert A. Hopkins Vice President and Regional Executive Scott M. Trilling Vice President Nikki R. Jackson Vice President and Regional Executive David C. Wheelock Vice President Douglas G. Scarboro Vice President and Regional Executive Carl D. White II Vice President Michael J. Mueller Group Vice President Stephen D. Williamson Vice President David Andolfatto Vice President Terri A. Aly Assistant Vice President Randall B. Balducci Vice President Jane Anne Batjer Assistant Vice President Jonathan C. Basden Vice President Alexander Baur Assistant Vice President Cassie R. Blackwell Vice President Jennifer M. Beatty Assistant Vice President Timothy A. Bosch Vice President Diane E. Berry Assistant Vice President Adam L. Brown Vice President Heidi L. Beyer Assistant Vice President Susan M. Black Assistant Vice President Maurice D. Mahone Assistant Vice President Yi Wen Assistant Vice President Ray J. Boshara Assistant Vice President Carolann M. Marker Assistant Vice President Ranada Y. Williams Assistant Vice President Winchell S. Carroll Jr. Assistant Vice President Jackie S. Martin Assistant Vice President Dean A. Woolcott Assistant Vice President Christopher D. Chalfant Assistant Vice President Michael W. McCracken Assistant Vice President Jeffrey S. Wright Assistant Vice President Jill Schlueter Dorries Assistant Vice President Christopher J. Neely Assistant Vice President Christian M. Zimmermann Assistant Vice President William D. Dupor Assistant Vice President Arthur A. North II Assistant Vice President Subhayu Bandyopadhyay Officer William R. Emmons Assistant Vice President Glen M. Owens Assistant Vice President Jeromey L. Farmer Officer Kathy A. Freeman Assistant Vice President Michael T. Owyang Assistant Vice President George-Levi Gayle Officer James W. Fuchs Assistant Vice President Jennifer L. Robinson Assistant Vice President Limor Golan Officer Joseph A. Gambino Assistant Vice President Craig E. Schaefer Assistant Vice President Kevin L. Kliesen Officer Carlos Garriga Assistant Vice President Abby L. Schafers Assistant Vice President Alexander Monge-Naranjo Officer Patricia M. Goessling Assistant Vice President Kathy A. Schildknecht Assistant Vice President Christopher M. Pfeiffer Officer Stephen P. Greene Assistant Vice President Philip G. Schlueter Assistant Vice President Juan M. Sánchez Officer Tamara S. Grimm Assistant Vice President Amy B. Simpkins Assistant Vice President Kevin J. Shannon Officer Karen L. Harper Assistant Vice President Scott B. Smith Assistant Vice President Guillaume A. Vandenbroucke Officer Jennifer A. Haynes Assistant Vice President Yvonne S. Sparks Assistant Vice President Kevin L. Henry Assistant Vice President Kristina L. Stierholz Assistant Vice President Cathryn L. Hohl Assistant Vice President Rebecca M. Stoltz Assistant Vice President Terri L. Kirchhofer Assistant Vice President Mary C. Suiter Assistant Vice President Catherine A. Kusmer Assistant Vice President Bryan B. Underwood Assistant Vice President Christopher T. Laughman Assistant Vice President James L. Warren Assistant Vice President stlouisfed.org | 43 Schuyler Scotland Clark Rutledge Kirksville Adair Knox Atlanta Macon Shelby Marion Hannibal Monroe City 29 Monroe Randolph Kansas City Columbia Callaway RI OU ISS Ralls Louis LaddoniP Audrain Hallsville Boone IVER URI R MISSO M A ER RIV Montgomery 35 Lewis M Jefferson City Moniteau Osage Miller Osage Beach Camden C O N TAC T U S Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis One Federal Reserve Bank Plaza Broadway and Locust Street St. Louis, MO 63102 314-444-8444 Little Rock Branch Stephens Building 111 Center St., Ste. 1000 Little Rock, AR 72201 501-324-8300 Louisville Branch National City Tower 101 S. Fifth St., Ste. 1920 Louisville, KY 40202 502-568-9200 Memphis Branch 200 N. Main St. Memphis, TN 38103 901-531-5000 Maries DE NA CO AS CREDITS Gasconade MISSOURI Cole ER RIV Rolla Crawf Phelps G Pulaski Lebanon Lists of those on boards of directors Al Stamborski and councils are as of April 8, 2016, as Editor and Project Bolivar Dallas Manager Laclede Licking is the list of bank officers. Dent Polk AP Westcott Dade Designer Greene Texas For additional copies, contact: Webster Kristie M. Engemann Springfield Eminence Wright Public Affairs Suzanne Shenkman Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Lawrence Research Assistance Shannon Mountain View Christian P.O. Box 442 Douglas Kathie Lauher St. Louis, MO 63166 Howell Adam Robinson Barry Stone Branson Photographers or email pubtracking@stls.frb.orgCassville Oregon Taney Ozark Bakersfield FRED and Inside the Economy Museum are regThis report is also available online at: isteredSprings trademarks of the Federal Reserve Bank of www.stlouisfed.org/annual-report Eureka Baxter Fulton St. Louis. Center for Household Financial Stability Bentonville Carroll Boone Benton is a trademark of the Bank. Marion Horseshoe Bend Fayetteville Washington Madison Crawford Franklin Scott Faulkner ER FOUR Perry Saline Ja Searcy Perryville RIV AFAYE CHE L Sharp Mountain View Stone Independence Conway Logan Booneville Yell Izard Clinton Van Buren Cleburne Johnson Clarksville Pope Fort Smith Sebastian Jasper Newton Searcy White Prairie Pulaski Lonoke Wo AN KA K EE RI VE 56 65 R 74 INDIANA ILLINOIS SH BA R VE RI ER A W IV LI IL Mount Sterling Adams Brown TE R I NO 69 R VE I SR W HI 74 PI IP SS SI IS Scott Morgan VE RI un Greene Calho Pike ia R siana KA SK AS KI A M Pike RI VE R Indianapolis Lincoln O’Fallon Warren St. Charles Rockbridge Montgomery Macoupin Effingham Effingham Jasper Jersey Alton 74 Fayette 65 Sullivan Bloomfield Crawford Greene Bedford Lawrence Jackson LE TT Bond Louisville H AS AB W Louisville Harrison Wabash Edwards Hamilton R VE RI St. Louis Lawrence Martin LI Switzerland Jefferson Vevay Scottsburg Galla St. Louis Richland Knox Daviess Scott Carlyle Marion Clay Carroll City French Lick St. Louis Washington ClarkER Trimble Clinton V Orange RI Ow Wayne IO St. Clair Greenville Dubois Henry Pike OH Oldham Oakland City Mount Vernon Washington Floyd Shelby Crawford Gibson F Marissa Franklin Jefferson Monroe Jefferson ER Jefferson V Posey Warrick Santa Claus RI Frankfort White EC De Soto r Perry Perry Laconia AM Vanderburgh e Randolph R c Spencer n ME Evansville e Anderso Bullitt Franklin M Omaha Sp ford Washington Meade Nelson Ste. ISSIS Royalton Hancock Genevieve SIPP Bardstown Merc Breckinridge IR Farmington Henderson Owensboro Hardin IV Washington Saline Gallatin Jackson ER Daviess Williamson Perry Iron St. Francois Union Stonefort Marion McLean Webster Union Centerville Johnson Pope Hardin Cape Ohio Madison Girardeau Campbellsville Grayson Providence Crittenden Reynolds Cape Girardeau Hopkins Taylor Munfordville Butler Pulaski Massac Green Bollinger Muhlenberg Edmonson Hart Casey Fredonia Caldwell Wayne Adair Warren 65 Scott Ballard Crofton Lyon Bowling Green McCracken Russell n Barren Logan Sikeston Carter Trigg Christian W Cumberland Carlisle Benton Poplar Bluff Stoddard Todd Russellville Marshall Burkesville Montice Graves Allen Simpson Butler Monroe Clinton n Ripley Calloway Wingo New Fulton Madrid Maynard Cottage Grove Union City Clay Obion Randolph T H I S I S N ’ T T H E E N D O F T H E R OA D Weakley Henry CUMBERLAND RIVER Greene Nashville We have much more that we want to share with you. Go Benton Pemiscot Rutherford Walnut Ridge Dunklin Dyer to our website—stlouisfed.org—for personal finance Gibson Carroll Lawrence Blytheville and economic education, for the latest speeches and Halls Jonesboro Mississippi Crockett media interviews by our president, for research and Craighead Lauderdale Madison data on the economy, for events that you might want Henderson Haywood Poinsett Newport Jackson Brownsville to attend and jobs that you might want to apply for. Marked Tree ackson Tipton Tweets, videos, podcasts and blogs, too. There’s so much Chester Cross that you’ll want65to visit again and again. Shelby McCrory Bolivar Fayette Crittenden Hardin McNairy oodruff Hardeman Forrest City St. Francis Benton De Soto Alcorn ER IV Tippah R Lee R Marshall TE Madison IN LL RO G KENTUC y Metcalfe Mississippi Livingston Alexander rue Bo RL a VE RI IVE EE R Hickman ESS N TEN MI SS ISS mingo TENNESSEE RIVER IPP IR IVE R Decatur Lake R ER IV ER HI TC HA Memphis TENNESSEE Exploring Other Resources from the St. Louis Fed The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis offers a wealth of information about the economy, economics, personal finance and related topics. We have something for everyone—researchers, teachers, business executives, market analysts, policymakers, bankers, community developers, students and, of course, the general public. Our information is available online, on paper and on your phone or tablet. And it’s all free. Below are some of our resources. YEARS SINCE 1991 Since the end of 2015, we’ve added 90,000 data series to FRED® (Federal Reserve Economic Data), bringing the total to 384,000 series available for downloading, tracking, graphing—or just viewing. Now in its 25th year, FRED is used by millions of people around the world. See http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2. Want to learn how to use FRED? A good teaching tool is The FRED Blog, where twice a week our economists show you step-by-step how they’ve created a custom data chart that pertains to their work. See http://fredblog.stlouisfed.org. In our other blog, St. Louis Fed On the Economy, the work of our economists and others at the St. Louis Fed is summarized three times a week. See www.stlouisfed.org/ on-the-economy. The Center for Household Financial Stability® opened three years ago, with the goals of researching and strengthening the balance sheets of American families. Read “The Quarterly Debt Monitor,” “The Demographics of Wealth” and other reports from the center and watch related videos. Go to www.stlouisfed.org/hfs. When in St. Louis, stop by the Fed to visit our Inside the Economy Museum,® a hands-on experience for learning about the economy—and your role in it—in a fun and interactive way. The museum is open 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Monday through Friday. See www.stlouisfed.org/economymuseum.