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Minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee
April 30–May 1, 2013
A meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee was
held in the offices of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, April 30, 2013, at 2:00 p.m. and continued on
Wednesday, May 1, 2013, at 9:00 a.m.
PRESENT:
Ben Bernanke, Chairman
William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman
James Bullard
Elizabeth Duke
Charles L. Evans
Esther L. George
Jerome H. Powell
Sarah Bloom Raskin
Eric Rosengren
Jeremy C. Stein
Daniel K. Tarullo
Janet L. Yellen
Christine Cumming, Richard W. Fisher, Narayana
Kocherlakota, Sandra Pianalto, and Charles I.
Plosser, Alternate Members of the Federal Open
Market Committee
Jeffrey M. Lacker, Dennis P. Lockhart, and John C.
Williams, Presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks
of Richmond, Atlanta, and San Francisco, respectively
Deborah J. Danker, Deputy Secretary
Matthew M. Luecke, Assistant Secretary
David W. Skidmore, Assistant Secretary
Michelle A. Smith, Assistant Secretary
Scott G. Alvarez, General Counsel
Steven B. Kamin, Economist
David W. Wilcox, Economist
Thomas A. Connors, Troy Davig, Michael P. Leahy,
Stephen A. Meyer, David Reifschneider, Daniel G.
Sullivan, and William Wascher, Associate Economists
Simon Potter, Manager, System Open Market Account
Michael S. Gibson, Director, Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation, Board of Governors

James A. Clouse and William Nelson, Deputy Directors, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Andreas Lehnert, Deputy Director, Office of Financial
Stability Policy and Research, Board of Governors
Jon W. Faust, Special Adviser to the Board, Office of
Board Members, Board of Governors
Linda Robertson, Assistant to the Board, Office of
Board Members, Board of Governors
Seth B. Carpenter, Senior Associate Director, Division
of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Joyce K. Zickler, Senior Adviser, Division of Monetary
Affairs, Board of Governors
Michael T. Kiley and Thomas Laubach, Associate Directors, Division of Research and Statistics, Board
of Governors
David Bowman, Deputy Associate Director, Division
of International Finance, Board of Governors
Steven A. Sharpe and John J. Stevens, Assistant Directors, Division of Research and Statistics, Board of
Governors; Min Wei, Assistant Director, Division
of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Stefania D’Amico, Senior Economist, Division of
Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Randall A. Williams, Records Project Manager, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Kenneth C. Montgomery, First Vice President, Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston
David Altig, Jeff Fuhrer, and Loretta J. Mester, Executive Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of Atlanta, Boston, and Philadelphia, respectively
Lorie K. Logan and Mark E. Schweitzer, Senior Vice
Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of New York
and Cleveland, respectively

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Federal Open Market Committee
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Fred Furlong, Group Vice President, Federal Reserve
Bank of San Francisco
Evan F. Koenig and David C. Wheelock, Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of Dallas and St.
Louis, respectively
Robert L. Hetzel and Andrea Tambalotti, Senior Economists, Federal Reserve Banks of Richmond and
New York, respectively
Jonathan Heathcote, Senior Research Economist, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Developments in Financial Markets and the Federal Reserve’s Balance Sheet
The Manager of the System Open Market Account
(SOMA) reported on developments in domestic and
foreign financial markets as well as the System open
market operations during the period since the Federal
Open Market Committee (FOMC) met on March 19–
20, 2013. By unanimous vote, the Committee ratified
the Open Market Desk’s domestic transactions over
the intermeeting period. There were no intervention
operations in foreign currencies for the System’s account over the intermeeting period.
By unanimous vote, the Committee agreed to extend
the reciprocal currency (swap) arrangements with the
Bank of Canada and the Banco de México for an additional year beginning in mid-December 2013; these
arrangements are associated with the Federal Reserve’s
participation in the North American Framework
Agreement of 1994. The arrangement with the Bank of
Canada allows for cumulative drawings of up to $2 billion equivalent, and the arrangement with the Banco de
México allows for cumulative drawings of up to
$3 billion equivalent. The vote to renew the System’s
participation in these swap arrangements was taken at
this meeting because a provision in the Framework
Agreement requires each party to provide six months’
prior notice of an intention to terminate its participation.
Staff Review of the Economic Situation
The information reviewed at the April 30–May 1 meeting indicated that economic activity expanded at a
moderate pace in the first quarter. In March, the unemployment rate edged down further, although it continued to be elevated, and employment growth slowed.
Consumer price inflation was relatively low, while

measures of longer-run inflation expectations remained
stable.
After faster gains in January and February, private nonfarm employment increased at a subdued rate in March,
and government employment declined slightly. The
unemployment rate was 7.6 percent in March, a little
below its average in the fourth quarter of last year. The
labor force participation rate also edged down to below
its fourth-quarter average. The rate of long-duration
unemployment and the share of workers employed part
time for economic reasons declined somewhat in
March, but these measures remained well above their
pre-recession levels. Indicators of near-term labor
market conditions were consistent with projections of
moderate increases in employment in the coming
months: Measures of job openings generally moved
up, but the rate of gross private-sector hiring and indicators of firms’ hiring plans were subdued, on balance,
and initial claims for unemployment insurance trended
up a little over the intermeeting period.
Manufacturing production decreased slightly in March
but expanded at a brisk rate in the first quarter as a
whole, supported in part by a recovery in output following Hurricane Sandy, and the rate of manufacturing
capacity utilization in March was somewhat higher than
in the fourth quarter. The production of motor vehicles and parts rose solidly in March, but factory output
outside of the motor vehicle sector declined. Automakers’ schedules indicated that the pace of motor
vehicle assemblies in the coming months would be a bit
below that in March. Broad indicators of manufacturing production, such as the diffusion indexes of new
orders from the national and regional manufacturing
surveys, were at levels that pointed to small increases in
factory output in the near term.
Real personal consumption expenditures (PCE) expanded at a solid pace in March and in the first quarter
as a whole. Some factors that tend to influence household spending were generally positive in recent months.
For example, real disposable income increased in February and March, supported in part by recent declines
in retail gasoline prices that raised household purchasing power and offset to some extent the effects of this
year’s higher payroll and income taxes. In addition,
household net worth likely rose in recent months as a
result of higher equity values and home prices. In contrast, consumer sentiment in the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers was
roughly flat, on balance, in March and April and remained relatively downbeat.

Minutes of the Meeting of April 30–May 1, 2013
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Conditions in the housing sector continued to improve,
as real expenditures for residential investment expanded briskly in the first quarter, although from a low level.
Total combined starts of new single-family homes and
multifamily units increased in March to a level well
above that at the beginning of the year. Home prices
continued to rise through February, and sales of new
homes rose in March, but sales of existing homes decreased a little.
Growth in real business expenditures on equipment
and software slowed in the first quarter. Nominal
shipments of nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft continued to rise gradually in February and March,
but new orders were slightly below the level of shipments, pointing to modest gains in shipments in the
near term. Other forward-looking indicators, such as
surveys of business conditions and capital spending
plans, also suggested that outlays for business equipment would rise at a subdued pace in the coming
months. Real business spending for nonresidential
construction declined a little in the first quarter. Real
inventory investment increased in the first quarter, and
business inventories in most industries appeared to be
broadly aligned with sales in recent months.
Real federal government purchases declined markedly
in the first quarter, led by a significant decrease in defense spending, which may have partially reflected the
anticipated effects of the federal spending sequestration. Real state and local government purchases also
decreased somewhat in the first quarter, as state and
local construction expenditures continued to decline.
The advance release of first-quarter data for the national income and product accounts showed that real net
exports of goods and services also subtracted moderately from real gross domestic product (GDP) growth,
as real imports outpaced real exports.
Overall consumer prices, as measured by the price index for PCE, edged down in March and rose just
1 percent from a year earlier. Consumer energy prices
declined in March, and retail gasoline prices fell further
in the first few weeks of April. Consumer food prices
only edged up in March. Consumer prices excluding
food and energy were flat in March, and their increase
from 12 months earlier was similar to that for total
consumer prices. Near-term inflation expectations
from the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan
Surveys of Consumers were slightly lower in April, and
longer-term inflation expectations in the survey were
little changed and remained within the narrow range
that they have occupied for several years.

Measures of labor compensation indicated that gains in
nominal wages remained subdued. Increases in the
employment cost index were modest over the year ending in the first quarter. Average hourly earnings for all
employees were unchanged in March, and hourly earnings gains in the first quarter as a whole were muted.
Economic growth in foreign economies overall in the
first quarter of 2013 showed only a small improvement
from that registered in the second half of 2012. Real
GDP growth picked up in the United Kingdom, and
recent indicators suggested that the pace of contraction
moderated in the euro area. In contrast, economic
growth in China slowed abruptly after surging late last
year. Foreign inflation appeared to increase a little in
the first quarter, partly as a result of higher food prices
in several emerging market economies, but remained
quite moderate.
Staff Review of the Financial Situation
Financial conditions improved a little, on balance, over
the intermeeting period. Yields of longer-term Treasury securities and foreign benchmark sovereign bonds
declined appreciably, reflecting the somewhat negative
tone of U.S. and foreign economic data releases as well
as policy actions by the Bank of Japan that were more
accommodative than the markets had expected. Equity
prices rose modestly, on net, supported in part by solid
quarterly earnings reports.
The expected path of the federal funds rate implied by
market quotes shifted down moderately over the intermeeting period. However, the Desk’s survey of
primary dealers, conducted prior to the April 30–May 1
meeting, indicated that the dealers continued to view
the third quarter of 2015 as the most likely time for the
initial increase in the target federal funds rate. The median dealer anticipated that the FOMC would maintain
its current pace of asset purchases through December
2013 and saw the second quarter of 2014 as the most
probable time for the end of asset purchases, implying
a slight upward revision to the projected total size of
the Federal Reserve’s asset purchase program.
Over the intermeeting period, near-term measures of
inflation compensation derived from yields on nominal
and inflation-protected Treasury securities moved lower amid somewhat disappointing economic data and
declines in energy and other commodity prices; forward
measures of inflation compensation changed little at
longer horizons. Yields on agency mortgage-backed
securities (MBS) decreased about in line with those on
nominal Treasury securities of comparable duration.

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Conditions in domestic dollar funding markets were
generally little changed, and offshore dollar funding
markets reacted only modestly to the elevated uncertainty surrounding the negotiations, early in the intermeeting period, to resolve the banking crisis in Cyprus.
Some indicators of the condition of domestic financial
institutions weakened slightly. Share prices for the
largest domestic banking organizations declined somewhat, on balance, and bank credit default swap spreads
edged a bit higher, on average, across the larger firms in
the sector.
Broad equity price indexes increased, on net, over the
intermeeting period, likely reflecting solid quarterly
earnings reports, stable medium-term earnings expectations, and lower interest rates. Option-implied volatility for the S&P 500 index over the near term remained
in a range that was low by historical standards.
Yields on corporate bonds fell roughly in line with
those on Treasury securities of comparable maturity,
generally leaving their spreads little changed. The rate
of corporate bond issuance by nonfinancial firms remained robust in March and April. Consistent with
recent trends, some companies reportedly retired a notable portion of their outstanding commercial paper
and issued longer-term bonds in comparable amounts.
Syndicated leveraged loans were issued at a record pace
in the first quarter, supported by strong demand for
this type of asset, particularly from nonbank institutions. Gross public issuance of equity by nonfinancial
firms was solid over the same period.
Conditions in some segments of the commercial real
estate (CRE) sector continued to improve in recent
months. Outstanding CRE loans held by commercial
banks edged up in the past two quarters following a
prolonged period of decline, and commercial mortgagebacked security issuance was strong in the first quarter.
According to the Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey
on Bank Lending Practices (SLOOS) conducted in
April, the fraction of banks that eased standards on
CRE loans over the past three months increased to a
relatively high level, while demand for these loans
strengthened further. CRE prices continued to move
up slowly, and price indexes for various market segments reached levels last seen in late 2008.
Rates on conforming home mortgage loans declined
over the intermeeting period, and the spread between
the primary mortgage rate and MBS yields remained
well below its peak during the second half of 2012.
The estimated pace of mortgage refinancing origina-

tions continued to be high, supported by historically
low mortgage rates. However, purchase mortgage applications stayed at low levels. Overall delinquencies
trended lower for both prime and subprime mortgages,
primarily reflecting the very tight underwriting standards imposed over the past several years.
Consumer credit continued to expand in January and
February, mostly driven by sizable increases in nonrevolving credit. Growth was particularly strong in auto
loans as well as in student loans extended through the
Department of Education’s Direct Loan Program. In
contrast, total revolving credit was about flat amid continued tight underwriting standards and terms on credit
card loans. Issuance of consumer asset-backed securities—in particular, those backed by subprime auto
loans—remained robust in recent months.
Total bank credit expanded moderately during the first
quarter of 2013. Gains continued to be concentrated in
commercial and industrial (C&I) loans, which increased
especially strongly at domestic banks. In the April
SLOOS, relatively large net fractions of these banks
reported having eased standards and reduced spreads
on C&I loans to firms of all sizes.
M2 grew at a faster pace in March and April than earlier in the year, possibly boosted by the higher level of
annual tax payments and refunds relative to recent
years. Meanwhile, the monetary base expanded briskly
over those two months, driven mainly by the increase
in reserve balances resulting from the Federal Reserve’s
asset purchases.
Early in the intermeeting period, prices of a range of
risky assets abroad fell in reaction to reports of the
“bail-in” of depositors at banks in Cyprus and the imposition of an extended bank holiday in that country,
but outside of Cyprus those movements generally
proved temporary. Euro-area equity indexes, which fell
as stresses in Cyprus intensified, ended the period up
slightly. By contrast, stock prices in Japan rose sharply,
as the Bank of Japan surprised investors with the scale
of its new monetary policy program aimed at raising
inflation to 2 percent. Yields on longer-term Japanese
government bonds displayed considerable volatility in
the days following the announcement, although they
were little changed, on net, over the intermeeting period. Outside of Japan, foreign benchmark sovereign
yields fell over the intermeeting period, with market
commentary citing weak U.S. and foreign macroeconomic data releases, increased expectations for further
monetary accommodation by some foreign central
banks, and the announcement by the Bank of Japan.

Minutes of the Meeting of April 30–May 1, 2013
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After appreciating, on balance, since early this year, the
dollar depreciated against most currencies, although it
continued to appreciate against the yen. Emerging
market stock prices changed little, on net, and emerging
market equity mutual funds experienced modest outflows.
Staff Economic Outlook
In the economic forecast prepared by the staff for the
April 30–May 1 FOMC meeting, the projection for real
GDP growth was little revised from that prepared for
the March meeting. With fiscal policy expected to be
tighter this year than last year, the staff still anticipated
that the pace of expansion in real GDP would only
somewhat exceed the growth rate of potential output in
2013. The staff also continued to project that real
GDP would accelerate gradually in 2014 and 2015,
supported by an eventual easing in the effects of fiscal
policy restraint on economic growth, increases in consumer and business sentiment, further improvements in
credit availability and financial conditions, and accommodative monetary policy. The expansion in economic
activity was anticipated to slowly reduce the slack in
labor and product markets over the projection period,
and the unemployment rate was expected to decline
gradually.
The staff’s forecast for inflation was also little revised
from the projection prepared for the March FOMC
meeting. With longer-run inflation expectations assumed to remain stable, energy prices expected to continue to trend down, and significant resource slack persisting over the forecast period, the staff continued to
project that inflation would remain subdued through
2015.
The staff viewed the uncertainty around its forecast for
economic activity as similar to the average level over
the past 20 years. However, the risks to this outlook
were viewed as skewed to the downside, reflecting in
part concerns about the situation in Europe. Although
the staff saw the outlook for inflation as uncertain, the
risks were viewed as balanced and not unusually high.
Participants’ Views on Current Conditions and the
Economic Outlook
In their discussion of the economic situation, meeting
participants generally indicated that they viewed the
information received during the intermeeting period as
suggesting that the economy was expanding at a moderate pace despite some softness in recent economic
data. Conditions in the labor market showed some
continued improvement, although the unemployment
rate remained elevated. Spending by consumers con-

tinued to expand, supported by better credit conditions, rising equity and housing prices, and lower energy prices; and the housing sector improved further.
However, growth in business investment spending
slowed somewhat, and fiscal policy appeared to be exerting significant near-term restraint on the economy.
Perhaps reflecting more subdued growth abroad, especially in Europe and China, net exports weakened in
the first quarter.
Participants generally saw the economic outlook as little changed since they met in March. However, economic data releases over the intermeeting period were
mixed, raising some concern that the recovery might be
slowing after a solid start earlier this year, thereby repeating the pattern observed in recent years. Various
views on this prospect were offered, from those participants who put more emphasis on the underlying momentum of the economy, noting the strengthening in
private domestic final demand, to those who stressed
the growing fiscal restraint or the other headwinds still
facing the economy. Participants continued to anticipate that, with appropriate monetary policy, growth
would proceed at a moderate pace over the medium
run and that the unemployment rate would decline
gradually toward levels consistent with the Committee’s
mandate. A number of participants noted that the balance of risks to growth remained to the downside, although a couple suggested that such risks had diminished appreciably since last fall. A few participants
warned that, in light of ongoing fiscal restraint and a
weak global outlook, economic data could remain soft
for the next few months, regardless of the underlying
strength of the economy.
Consumer spending was reported to be strong in a
number of areas of the country and, more broadly, appeared to be supported by rising equity and house prices, improved household balance sheets, and easier credit conditions. However, concerns were expressed that
this rate of growth in consumer expenditures might not
be sustainable without the support of a notable pickup
in business investment and hiring. Other factors that
might affect spending also were mentioned. For example, the losses in income and wealth experienced
during the crisis might lead households to be more cautious in their spending and to save at a higher rate;
wealth gains in recent years appeared concentrated
among higher-net-worth individuals, who may have a
lower propensity to spend out of additional wealth; and
retailers reported weakness in spending by lowerincome households, who had been more affected by
the increase in payroll taxes.

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Participants saw the housing market as having
strengthened further during the intermeeting period
and pointed variously to rising house prices, growth in
home sales, a lower inventory of houses for sale, a reduction in the average time houses stayed on the market, and encouraging reports from homebuilders. More
all-cash or investor purchases were being reported, and
the pace of home purchases overall appeared to be
constrained less by a lack of demand than by a lack of
homes for sale, in part reflecting fewer newly foreclosed houses coming onto the market. The rate of
new delinquencies on mortgages declined nearly to precrisis levels, and the pipeline of properties in the foreclosure process was being slowly worked down, in part
through modifications and short sales. Over time, the
supply of homes for sale was expected to increase as
new construction picked up and sellers saw more attractive opportunities to put their houses on the market. The improvement in the housing sector was also
seen as contributing to a pickup in activity in related
industries.
With some exceptions, business contacts were reporting continued caution about expanding investment or
payrolls. Reports included some weakening in manufacturing activity, due in part to reduced demand from
abroad, and farm exports in one District were projected
to be flat following strong growth in previous years.
However, the CRE sector showed some signs of recovery, and survey results indicated that the terms of
CRE lending were easing and loan demand increasing.
The federal spending sequestration and recent tax increases were viewed as restraining aggregate demand.
Participants differed somewhat in their assessments of
the magnitude of these effects on the economy, with
views ranging from an estimate of substantial fiscal
drag to one of less restraint than previously expected.
A few participants mentioned the sequestration’s impact on hiring and spending by the defense industry or
government contractors, but one participant noted that
a decline in expected future tax liabilities of the private
sector associated with lower federal spending might
provide a partial offset to the economic effects of the
budget cuts.
Participants generally saw signs of improvement in labor market conditions despite the weaker-thanexpected March payroll employment figure. Employment growth in earlier months had been solid, and
more-recent improvements included the further decline
in the unemployment rate in March and the gradual
progress being made in some other labor market indi-

cators. However, several participants cautioned that
the drop in the unemployment rate in the latest month
was also accompanied by another reduction in the labor
force participation rate; the decline in labor force participation over recent quarters could indicate that the
reduction in overall labor market slack had been substantially smaller than suggested by the change in the
unemployment rate over that period. One participant
commented that assessing the shortfall of employment
from its maximum level required taking account of not
only the gap between the unemployment rate and its
corresponding natural rate, but also the gap between
the labor force participation rate and its longer-term
trend—a trend which was admittedly subject to considerable uncertainty. A few participants mentioned that
job growth may have been restrained to an extent by
businesses postponing hiring because of uncertainties
over the implementation of health-care legislation or
because they were unable to find certain types of skilled
workers.
Both headline and core PCE inflation in the first quarter came in below the Committee’s longer-run goal of
2 percent, but these recent lower readings appeared to
be due, in part, to temporary factors; other measures of
inflation as well as inflation expectations had remained
more stable. Accordingly, participants generally continued to expect that inflation would move closer to the
2 percent objective over the medium run. Nonetheless,
a number of participants expressed concern that inflation was below the Committee’s target and stressed
that future price developments bore careful watching.
Most of the recent reports from business contacts revealed little upward pressure on prices or wages. A
couple of participants expressed the view that an additional monetary policy response might be warranted
should inflation fall further. It was also pointed out
that, even absent further disinflation, continued low
inflation might pose a threat to the economic recovery
by, for example, raising debt burdens. One participant
focused instead on the upside risks to inflation over the
longer term resulting from highly accommodative
monetary policy.
Financial conditions appeared to have eased further
over the intermeeting period: Longer-term interest
rates declined significantly, banks loosened their C&I
lending terms and standards on balance, and competition to make commercial and auto loans was strong.
Businesses were reportedly still borrowing to refinance,
but they had begun to take out more new loans as well.
While the Committee’s accommodative policy continued to provide support to financial conditions, events

Minutes of the Meeting of April 30–May 1, 2013
Page 7
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abroad also influenced U.S. markets over the intermeeting period. In particular, the Bank of Japan announced
a new monetary policy program that was considerably
more expansionary than markets had expected. Financial conditions in Europe improved somewhat over the
period, but some participants still saw the situation in
Europe as posing downside risks to U.S. growth. At
this meeting, a few participants expressed concern that
conditions in certain U.S. financial markets were becoming too buoyant, pointing to the elevated issuance
of bonds by lower-credit-quality firms or of bonds with
fewer restrictions on collateral and payment terms (socalled covenant-lite bonds). One participant cautioned
that the emergence of financial imbalances could prove
difficult for regulators to identify and address, and that
it would be appropriate to adjust monetary policy to
help guard against risks to financial stability.
In discussing the effects of the Committee’s asset purchases, several participants pointed to the improvement
in interest-sensitive sectors, such as consumer durables
and housing, over the recent period as evidence that
the purchases were having positive results for the
economy. The effects on a range of asset prices of the
Bank of Japan’s recent announcement were cited as
added evidence that large-scale asset purchases were
effective in easing financial conditions and thereby
helping stimulate economic activity. In evaluating the
prospects for benefits from asset purchases, however,
one participant viewed uncertainty about U.S. fiscal and
regulatory policies as interfering with the transmission
of monetary policy and as preventing asset purchases
from having a meaningful effect on the real economy.
Participants also touched on the conditions under
which it might be appropriate to change the pace of
asset purchases. Most observed that the outlook for
the labor market had shown progress since the program was started in September, but many of these participants indicated that continued progress, more confidence in the outlook, or diminished downside risks
would be required before slowing the pace of purchases would become appropriate. A number of participants expressed willingness to adjust the flow of purchases downward as early as the June meeting if the
economic information received by that time showed
evidence of sufficiently strong and sustained growth;
however, views differed about what evidence would be
necessary and the likelihood of that outcome. One
participant preferred to begin decreasing the rate of
purchases immediately, while another participant preferred to add more monetary accommodation at the
current meeting and mentioned that the Committee

had several other tools it could potentially use to do so.
Most participants emphasized that it was important for
the Committee to be prepared to adjust the pace of its
purchases up or down as needed to align the degree of
policy accommodation with changes in the outlook for
the labor market and inflation as well as the extent of
progress toward the Committee’s economic objectives.
Regarding the composition of purchases, one participant expressed the view that, in light of the substantial
improvement in the housing market and to avoid further credit allocation across sectors of the economy,
the Committee should start to shift any asset purchases
away from MBS and toward Treasury securities.
Committee Policy Action
Committee members saw the information received
over the intermeeting period as suggesting that economic activity had been expanding at a moderate pace.
Labor market conditions had shown some improvement in recent months, on balance, but the unemployment rate remained elevated. Household spending and
business fixed investment advanced, and the housing
sector had strengthened further, but fiscal policy was
restraining economic growth. The Committee expected that, with appropriate monetary policy accommodation, economic growth would proceed at a moderate pace and result in a gradual decline in the unemployment rate toward levels that the Committee judged
consistent with its dual mandate. Members generally
continued to anticipate that, with longer-term inflation
expectations stable and persisting slack in resource utilization, inflation over the medium term would likely
run at or below the Committee’s 2 percent objective.
In their discussion of monetary policy for the period
ahead, all but one member judged that a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy was warranted
in order to foster a stronger economic recovery in a
context of price stability. The Committee agreed to
continue purchases of MBS at a pace of $40 billion per
month and purchases of longer-term Treasury securities at a pace of $45 billion per month, as well as to
maintain the Committee’s reinvestment policies. The
Committee also retained its forward guidance about the
federal funds rate, including the thresholds on the unemployment and inflation rates. One member dissented from the Committee’s policy decision, expressing
concern that the continued high level of monetary accommodation increased the risks of future economic
and financial imbalances and, over time, could cause an
increase in inflation expectations.

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A few members expressed concerns that investor expectations of the cumulative size of the asset purchase
program appeared to have increased somewhat since it
was launched last September despite a notable decline
in the unemployment rate and other improvements in
the labor market since then. In contrast, a few other
members focused on evidence that market expectations
about the total size of the program had changed little,
on net, since the program was launched or had responded appropriately to incoming information.
Members generally agreed on the need for the Committee to communicate clearly that the pace and ultimate
size of its asset purchases would depend on the Committee’s continued assessment of the outlook for the
labor market and inflation in addition to its judgments
regarding the efficacy and costs of additional purchases
and the extent of progress toward its economic objectives. To highlight its willingness to adjust the flow of
purchases in light of incoming information, the Committee included language in the statement to be released
following the meeting that said the Committee was
prepared to increase or reduce the pace of its purchases
to maintain appropriate policy accommodation as the
outlook for the labor market or inflation changes.
At the conclusion of the discussion, the Committee
voted to authorize and direct the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York, until it was instructed otherwise, to execute transactions in the System Account in accordance
with the following domestic policy directive:
“Consistent with its statutory mandate, the
Federal Open Market Committee seeks
monetary and financial conditions that will
foster maximum employment and price stability. In particular, the Committee seeks
conditions in reserve markets consistent
with federal funds trading in a range from
0 to ¼ percent. The Committee directs the
Desk to undertake open market operations
as necessary to maintain such conditions.
The Desk is directed to continue purchasing
longer-term Treasury securities at a pace of
about $45 billion per month and to continue purchasing agency mortgage-backed securities at a pace of about $40 billion per
month. The Committee also directs the
Desk to engage in dollar roll and coupon
swap transactions as necessary to facilitate
settlement of the Federal Reserve’s agency
mortgage-backed securities transactions.
The Committee directs the Desk to maintain its policy of rolling over maturing

Treasury securities into new issues and its
policy of reinvesting principal payments on
all agency debt and agency mortgage-backed
securities in agency mortgage-backed securities. The System Open Market Account
Manager and the Secretary will keep the
Committee informed of ongoing developments regarding the System’s balance sheet
that could affect the attainment over time
of the Committee’s objectives of maximum
employment and price stability.”
The vote encompassed approval of the statement below to be released at 2:00 p.m.:
“Information received since the Federal
Open Market Committee met in March
suggests that economic activity has been
expanding at a moderate pace. Labor market conditions have shown some improvement in recent months, on balance, but the
unemployment rate remains elevated.
Household spending and business fixed investment advanced, and the housing sector
has strengthened further, but fiscal policy is
restraining economic growth. Inflation has
been running somewhat below the Committee’s longer-run objective, apart from temporary variations that largely reflect fluctuations in energy prices. Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable.
Consistent with its statutory mandate, the
Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The Committee expects that, with appropriate policy accommodation, economic growth will proceed at a moderate pace and the unemployment rate will gradually decline toward
levels the Committee judges consistent with
its dual mandate. The Committee continues
to see downside risks to the economic outlook. The Committee also anticipates that
inflation over the medium term likely will
run at or below its 2 percent objective.
To support a stronger economic recovery
and to help ensure that inflation, over time,
is at the rate most consistent with its dual
mandate, the Committee decided to continue purchasing additional agency mortgagebacked securities at a pace of $40 billion per
month and longer-term Treasury securities
at a pace of $45 billion per month. The

Minutes of the Meeting of April 30–May 1, 2013
Page 9
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Committee is maintaining its existing policy
of reinvesting principal payments from its
holdings of agency debt and agency
mortgage-backed securities in agency
mortgage-backed securities and of rolling
over maturing Treasury securities at auction.
Taken together, these actions should maintain downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, support mortgage markets, and
help to make broader financial conditions
more accommodative.
The Committee will closely monitor incoming information on economic and financial
developments in coming months. The
Committee will continue its purchases of
Treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities, and employ its other policy tools as
appropriate, until the outlook for the labor
market has improved substantially in a context of price stability. The Committee is
prepared to increase or reduce the pace of
its purchases to maintain appropriate policy
accommodation as the outlook for the labor
market or inflation changes. In determining
the size, pace, and composition of its asset
purchases, the Committee will continue to
take appropriate account of the likely efficacy and costs of such purchases as well as the
extent of progress toward its economic objectives.
To support continued progress toward
maximum employment and price stability,
the Committee expects that a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy will
remain appropriate for a considerable time
after the asset purchase program ends and
the economic recovery strengthens. In particular, the Committee decided to keep the
target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to
¼ percent and currently anticipates that this
exceptionally low range for the federal
funds rate will be appropriate at least as
long as the unemployment rate remains
above 6½ percent, inflation between one
and two years ahead is projected to be no
more than a half percentage point above the
Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal, and
longer-term inflation expectations continue
to be well anchored. In determining how
long to maintain a highly accommodative
stance of monetary policy, the Committee

will also consider other information, including additional measures of labor market
conditions, indicators of inflation pressures
and inflation expectations, and readings on
financial developments. When the Committee decides to begin to remove policy
accommodation, it will take a balanced approach consistent with its longer-run goals
of maximum employment and inflation of
2 percent.”
Voting for this action: Ben Bernanke, William C.
Dudley, James Bullard, Elizabeth Duke, Charles L. Evans, Jerome H. Powell, Sarah Bloom Raskin, Eric
Rosengren, Jeremy C. Stein, Daniel K. Tarullo, and
Janet L. Yellen.
Voting against this action: Esther L. George.
Ms. George dissented because she continued to view
monetary policy as overly accommodative and therefore as posing risks to the long-term sustainable growth
of the economy. She expressed concern that the stance
of policy might be fostering imbalances and excessive
risk-taking in some financial markets and institutions,
and she cited the potential for the Committee’s ongoing asset purchases to complicate the future conduct of
policy, raise uncertainty, and affect future inflation expectations. Accordingly, Ms. George preferred to signal a near-term tapering of asset purchases, which
would begin to move policy toward a more appropriate
stance.
Review of Exit Strategy Principles
After the policy vote, participants began a review of the
exit strategy principles that were published in the
minutes of the Committee’s June 2011 meeting. Those
principles, which the Committee issued to clarify how it
intended to normalize the stance and conduct of monetary policy when doing so eventually became appropriate, included broad principles along with some details
about the timing and sequence of specific steps the
Committee expected to take. The participants’ discussion touched on various aspects of the exit strategy
principles and policy normalization more generally,
including the size and composition of the SOMA portfolio in the longer run, the use of a range of reservedraining tools, the approach to sales of securities, the
eventual framework for policy implementation, and the
relationship between the principles and the economic
thresholds in the Committee’s forward guidance on the
federal funds rate. The broad principles adopted almost two years ago appeared generally still valid, but
developments since then—including the change in the

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Federal Open Market Committee
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size and composition of SOMA asset holdings—
suggested a need for greater flexibility regarding the
details of implementing policy normalization, particularly because those details would appropriately depend
at least in part upon future economic and financial developments. Also, because normalization still appeared
to be well in the future, the Committee might wish to
wait and acquire additional experience to inform its
plans. In particular, the process of normalizing policy
could yield information about the most effective
framework for implementing monetary policy in the
longer run, and thus about the appropriate size of the
SOMA portfolio and level of reserve balances. In addition, several participants raised the possibility that the
federal funds rate might not, in the future, be the best
indicator of the general level of short-term interest
rates, and supported further staff study of potential
alternative approaches to implementing monetary policy in the longer term and of possible new tools to improve control over short-term interest rates.
Views differed regarding whether the best course at this
point would be to simply acknowledge that certain
components of the June 2011 principles had been overtaken by events or rather to formally revise the principles. Acknowledging that the principles need to be
updated would help avoid possible confusion regarding
the Committee’s intentions; waiting to update the principles would allow the Committee to obtain additional
information before revising them. It was also mentioned that the public’s understanding of the likely exit
process might not be improved if the Committee issued only a set of broad principles without providing
detailed information on the steps anticipated for nor

malization. However, issuing revised principles relatively soon could give the public additional confidence
that the Committee had the tools and a plan for eventually normalizing the conduct of policy. Moreover,
one participant stressed that the Committee’s ability to
provide forward guidance about the normalization process was a key monetary policy tool, and revised principles would permit use of that tool to help adjust the
stance of policy. Participants emphasized that their
review of the June 2011 exit strategy principles did not
suggest any change in their views about the economic
conditions that would eventually warrant beginning the
process of normalizing the stance of monetary policy.
At the conclusion of the discussion, the Chairman directed the staff to undertake additional preparatory
work on this issue for Committee consideration in the
future.
It was agreed that the next meeting of the Committee
would be held on Tuesday–Wednesday, June 18–19,
2013. The meeting adjourned at 1:05 p.m. on May 1,
2013.
Notation Vote
By notation vote completed on April 9, 2013, the
Committee unanimously approved the minutes of the
FOMC meeting held on March 19–20, 2013.

_____________________________
William B. English
Secretary