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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, December
19, 2000, at 9:00 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Greenspan, Chairman
Mr. McDonough, Vice Chairman
Mr. Broaddus
Mr. Ferguson
Mr. Gramlich
Mr. Guynn
Mr. Jordan
Mr. Kelley
Mr. Meyer
Mr. Parry
Mr. Hoenig, Ms. Minehan, Messrs. Moskow and Poole, Alternate Members of the
Federal Open Market Committee
Messrs. McTeer, Santomero, and Stern, Presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks of
Dallas, Philadelphia and Minneapolis respectively
Mr. Kohn, Secretary and Economist
Mr. Bernard, Deputy Secretary
Ms. Fox, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Gillum, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Mattingly, General Counsel
Mr. Baxter, Deputy General Counsel
Ms. Johnson, Economist
Mr. Stockton, Economist
Mr. Beebe, Ms. Cumming, Messrs. Goodfriend, Howard, Lindsey, Reinhart,
Simpson, and Sniderman, Associate Economists
Mr. Fisher, Manager, System Open Market Account
Mr. Winn, Assistant to the Board, Office of Board Members, Board of Governors
Mr. Ettin, Deputy Director, Division of Research and Statistics, Board of Governors
Mr. Madigan, Associate Director, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors

Messrs. Oliner, Slifman, and Struckmeyer, Associate Directors, Division of Research
and Statistics, Board of Governors
Mr. Whitesell, Assistant Director, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Ms. Low, Open Market Secretariat Assistant, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of
Governors
Mr. Lyon, First Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Ms. Browne, Messrs. Hakkio, Hunter, Kos, Ms. Mester, Messrs. Rolnick and
Rosenblum, Senior Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of Boston, Kansas City,
Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, Minneapolis, and Dallas respectively
Messrs. Cunningham and Gavin, Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of Atlanta
and St. Louis respectively
By unanimous vote, the minutes of the meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee held
on November 15, 2000, were approved.
The Manager reported on developments in domestic financial markets and on System open
market transactions in government securities and federal agency obligations during the
period November 15, 2000, through December 18, 2000. By unanimous vote, the Committee
ratified these transactions.
The Manager of the System Open Market Account also reported on recent developments in
foreign exchange markets. There were no open market operations in foreign currencies for
the System's account in the period since the previous meeting.
The Committee then turned to a discussion of the economic situation and outlook and the
implementation of monetary policy over the intermeeting period ahead.
The information reviewed at this meeting provided evidence that economic activity, which
had expanded at an appreciably lower pace since midyear, might have slowed further in
recent months. Consumer spending and business purchases of equipment and software had
decelerated markedly after having registered extraordinary gains in the first half of the year.
Housing construction, though still relatively firm, was noticeably below its robust pace of
earlier in the year. With final spending rising at a reduced rate, inventory overhangs had
emerged in a number of goods-producing industries, most visibly in the motor vehicle sector.
Manufacturing production had declined as a consequence, and the rate of expansion in
employment had moderated further. Evidence on core price inflation was mixed; by one
measure, it appeared to be increasing very gradually, in part reflecting the indirect effects of
higher energy costs, but by another it had remained at a relatively subdued level.
Growth in private nonfarm payroll employment moderated a little further on balance in
October and November. Manufacturing payrolls changed little over the two months, and job
gains in the construction, retail trade, and services industries were smaller than those of
earlier in the year. By contrast, the pace of hiring remained relatively brisk in the finance,
insurance, and real estate sectors. With growth in the demand for labor slowing, initial claims

for unemployment insurance continued to trend upward, and the civilian unemployment rate
edged up to 4 percent in November, its average thus far this year.
Industrial production declined slightly in October and November following a moderate thirdquarter increase that was well below the pace of expansion recorded during the first half of
the year. Utilities output surged in November in response to unseasonably cold weather
across much of the country while mining activity changed little. In manufacturing, motor
vehicle output was scaled back further in November, and there also were widespread declines
in industries not directly affected by conditions in the motor vehicle sector. Although the
production of high-tech equipment was still trending up, growth continued to slow from the
extraordinarily rapid increases of earlier in the year. The weakening of factory output in
November was reflected in a further decline in the rate of capacity utilization in
manufacturing to a point somewhat below its long-term average.
Consumer spending appeared to be decelerating noticeably further in the fourth quarter in an
environment of diminished consumer confidence, smaller job gains, and lower stock prices.
Retail sales were down somewhat on balance in October and November after a substantial
third-quarter increase; sales of light vehicles dropped over the two months, and growth in
expenditures on other consumer goods slowed. Outlays on services continued to grow at a
moderate rate through October (latest data).
Against the backdrop of declining interest rates on fixed-rate mortgages, residential building
activity had leveled out since midyear, and October starts remained at the third-quarter level.
Sales of new homes edged down in October, though they were still slightly above their thirdquarter level; sales of existing homes slipped somewhat in October but were near the middle
of their range over the past year. In the multifamily sector, starts moved up slightly further in
October, though they remained appreciably below their elevated level during the first half of
the year. Continuing relatively low vacancy rates for multifamily units suggested that the
prospects for additional construction were favorable.
Business investment in equipment and software increased at a sharply lower, though still
relatively robust, rate in the third quarter, and information on shipments of nondefense capital
goods indicated another moderate increase in business investment in October. Shipments of
communications, computing, and office equipment were well above their third-quarter
averages, and shipments of non-high-tech equipment turned up in October after having fallen
appreciably in earlier months. On the downside, sales of medium and heavy trucks declined
further over October and November, and new orders for such trucks remained weak.
Investment in nonresidential structures continued to rise briskly in October, and all the major
subcategories of construction put in place were up substantially on a year-over-year basis.
Market fundamentals, including rising property values and low vacancy rates, suggested that
further expansion of nonresidential building activity, particularly office construction, was
likely.
Inventory investment on a book-value basis picked up in October from the third-quarter pace,
and the aggregate inventory-sales ratio edged up to its highest level in the past twelve
months. In manufacturing, sizable increases in stocks were led by large accumulations at
producers of industrial and electrical machinery. As a result, the stock-sales ratio for
manufacturing reached its highest level in a year; advances in stock-sales ratios were
widespread among makers of durable goods while ratios remained high for a number of
categories of nondurable products. At the wholesale level, inventory accumulation inched up

from its third-quarter rate, and the sector's inventory-sales ratio was at the top of its range for
the past twelve months. Total retail stocks rose in line with sales in October, and the
inventory-sales ratio for this sector also remained at the upper end of its range over the past
year.
The U.S. trade deficit in goods and services reached a new record high in September and on a
quarterly average basis was up appreciably further in the third quarter. The value of exports
continued to grow strongly in the latest quarter, led by advances in exported machinery and
industrial supplies. The value of imports rose at an even faster rate than exports, with
increases in all major trade categories, especially industrial supplies, semiconductors, and
services. Economic growth in the foreign industrial countries slowed moderately in the third
quarter, and the available information suggested a further reduction in the fourth quarter.
Economic expansion eased in the euro area despite continued strong growth of investment
and exports, as consumer spending appeared to be damped by earlier interest rate increases
and by the drain on spendable income of higher prices for oil and imported goods more
generally. In addition, weak consumption appeared to be an important factor in continued
sluggish economic growth in Japan. Economic activity also decelerated in some developing
countries in the third quarter, with recent indicators suggesting a slowdown in expansion in
many parts of East Asia.
Incoming data indicated that, on balance, price inflation had picked up only a little, if at all.
Consumer prices, as measured by the consumer price index (CPI) on a total and a core basis,
rose mildly in October and November after a sizable September increase, but on a
year-over-year basis core CPI prices increased noticeably more in the twelve months ended
in November than in the previous twelve-month period. When measured by the personal
consumption expenditure (PCE) chain-type index, however, consumer price inflation was
modest in both October (latest data) and the twelve months ended in October, with little
change year over year. At the producer level, core prices edged down on balance in October
and November; moreover, producer inflation eased somewhat on a year-over-year basis,
though the deceleration was more than accounted for by an earlier surge in tobacco prices
during the year ended in November 1999. With regard to labor costs, average hourly earnings
of production or nonsupervisory workers increased in November at the slightly higher rate
recorded in October. For the twelve months ended in October, average hourly earnings rose
somewhat more than in the previous twelve months.
At its meeting on November 15, 2000, the Committee adopted a directive that called for
maintaining conditions in reserve markets consistent with an unchanged federal funds rate of
about 6-1/2 percent. In taking that action, the members noted that despite clear indications of
a more moderate expansion in economic activity, persisting risks of heightened inflation
pressures remained a concern, particularly in the context of a gradual upward trend in core
inflation. In these circumstances, a steady monetary policy was the best means to promote
price stability and sustainable economic expansion. While recognizing that growth was
slowing more than had been anticipated and that developments might be moving in a
direction that would require a shift to a balanced risk statement, members agreed that such a
change would be premature. As a result, they agreed that the statement accompanying the
announcement of their decision should continue to indicate that the risks remained weighted
mainly in the direction of rising inflation.
Open market operations throughout the intermeeting period were directed toward
maintaining the federal funds rate at the Committee's targeted level of 6-1/2 percent, and the

average rate remained close to the intended level. Against the background of deteriorating
conditions in some segments of financial markets, slower economic expansion, and public
comments by Federal Reserve officials about the implications of those developments, market
expectations about the future course of the federal funds rate were revised down appreciably
over the intermeeting period, and market interest rates on Treasury and private
investment-grade securities declined somewhat over the intermeeting interval. The weaker
outlook for economic growth, coupled with growing market concerns about corporate
earnings, weighed down equity prices and boosted risk spreads on lower-rated
investment-grade and high-yield bonds. Equity prices were quite volatile during the
intermeeting period and, reflecting numerous dour reports on corporate earnings and
incoming information indicating slower growth in economic activity in the United States,
broad indexes of stock market prices dropped considerably on balance over the intermeeting
period.
In foreign exchange markets, the trade-weighted value of the dollar edged lower on balance
over the intermeeting interval in terms of the currencies of a broad group of U.S. trading
partners. Among the major foreign currencies, the dollar fell moderately against the euro but
moved up to a roughly comparable extent in terms of the yen. The dollar's decline against the
euro reflected a growing perception that economic expansion in the euro area would cool
comparatively less than in the United States. Correspondingly, the slide of the yen seemed to
be related to weak economic data, stagnant business sentiment, and political uncertainties in
Japan. The dollar posted a small gain against an index of the currencies of other important
trading partners, largely reflecting weaker financial conditions in some emerging economies.
The broad monetary aggregates decelerated further in November. The slowing growth of M2
in October and November following strong expansion in August and September apparently
reflected the moderating rates of increase in nominal income and spending in recent months
and perhaps some persisting effects of the rise in opportunity costs earlier in the year. M3
growth slowed less than that of M2 in November, in part because of stepped-up issuance of
large time deposits as banks reduced their reliance on funding from overseas offices. The
growth of domestic nonfinancial debt slowed in October (latest data), reflecting a larger
further paydown of federal debt and a reduced pace of private borrowing.
The staff forecast prepared for this meeting suggested that the economic expansion had
slowed considerably, to a rate somewhat below the staff's current estimate of the growth of
the economy's potential output, but that it would gradually gain strength over the next two
years. The forecast anticipated that the expansion of domestic final demand would be held
back to some extent by the diminishing influence of the wealth effects associated with past
outsized gains in equity prices but also by the relatively high interest rates and the somewhat
stringent credit terms and conditions on some types of loans by financial institutions. As a
result, growth of spending on consumer durables was expected to be appreciably below that
in recent quarters, and housing demand to be slightly weaker. Business fixed investment,
notably outlays for equipment and software, was projected to remain relatively robust;
growth abroad would support the expansion of U.S. exports; and fiscal policy was assumed
to continue its moderate expansionary trend. Core price inflation was projected to rise only
slightly over the forecast horizon, partly as a result of higher import prices but also as a
consequence of some further increases in nominal labor compensation gains that would not
be fully offset by the expected growth of productivity.
In the Committee's discussion of current and prospective economic developments, members

commented that recent statistical and anecdotal information provided clear indications of
significant slowing in the expansion of business activity and also pointed to appreciable
erosion in business and consumer confidence. The deceleration in the economy had occurred
from an unsustainably high growth rate in the first half of the year, and the resulting
containment in demand pressures on resources already had improved the outlook for
inflation. The question at this juncture was whether the expansion would remain near its
recent pace or continue to moderate. While the former still seemed to be the most likely
outcome, the very recent information on labor markets, sales and production, business and
consumer confidence, developments in financial markets, and growth in foreign economies
suggested that the risks to the economy had shifted rapidly and perceptibly to the downside.
Concerning the outlook for inflation, members commented that the upside risks clearly had
diminished in the wake of recent developments and that, with pressures on resources likely to
abate at least a little, subdued inflation was a reasonable prospect.
Weakening trends in production and employment were most apparent in the manufacturing
sector. There were widespread anecdotal reports of production cutbacks, notably in industries
related to motor vehicles, and of associated declines in manufacturing employment.
However, many of the factory workers losing their jobs were readily finding employment
elsewhere in what generally continued to be characterized as very tight labor markets across
the country. The softening in manufacturing reflected weak sales and prompt efforts to limit
unwanted buildups in inventories. Even so, business contacts reported currently undesired
levels of inventories in a range of industries, not only in motor vehicles. In the aggregate,
cutbacks in inventory investment or runoffs of existing inventories accounted for a
significant part of the recent moderation in the growth of the overall economy.
The slowing in the growth of consumer spending that had prompted much of the backup in
inventories was evident from a wide variety of information, including anecdotal reports from
various parts of the country. Consumer sentiment seemed to have deteriorated appreciably in
recent weeks, though from a very high level, and retail sales were widely indicated to have
softened after a promising spurt early in the holiday season. Factors cited to account for the
relatively sudden emergence of this weakness, and also as possible harbingers of
developments in coming quarters, were the negative wealth effects of further declines in
stock market prices, the impact of very high energy costs on disposable incomes, and some
increase in caution about the outlook for employment opportunities and incomes. The extent
to which such developments would persist and perhaps foster more aggressive retrenchment
in consumer spending clearly was uncertain, but the members nonetheless anticipated that
over time underlying employment and income trends would be consistent with further
expansion in consumer expenditures, though at a pace well below that of earlier in the year.
Growth in business expenditures for equipment and software had moderated substantially in
recent months from very high rates of increase over an extended period. The slowdown
reflected a mix of interrelated developments including flagging growth in demand and
tightening financial conditions in the form of declining equity prices and stricter credit terms
for many business borrowers. The re-evaluation of prospects was most pronounced in the
high-tech industries. The profitability of using and producing such software and equipment
had been overestimated to a degree, and disappointing sales and a better appreciation of risks
had resulted in much slower growth in production of such equipment and sharp deterioration
in the equity prices of high-tech companies. At the same time, nonresidential construction
activity appeared to have been well maintained in many parts of the country, though there

were reports of softening in some regions and of some reductions or delays in planned
projects. Against this background, risks of further retrenchment in capital spending persisted,
but to date there was no evidence to suggest that the underlying pace of advances in
technology and related productivity growth had abated. Over time, further increases in
productivity would undergird continuing growth in demand for high-tech equipment. In the
nonresidential construction area, members noted that high occupancy rates and high rents
were supportive elements in the construction outlook.
With regard to the prospects for housing activity, members provided anecdotal reports of
some softening in a number of regions, though homebuilding was holding up well in others.
Housing demand was, of course, responding to many of the same factors that were affecting
consumer spending, including the negative wealth effects of declining stock market prices.
On the positive side, further growth in incomes and declines in mortgage rates were key
elements of underlying strength for the housing sector. On balance, housing construction at a
pace near current levels appeared to be a reasonable prospect in association with forecasts of
moderate growth in the overall economy.
Growth in foreign economic activity likely would continue to foster expansion in U.S.
exports, though members noted that there were signs of softer business conditions in some
foreign nations. In addition, members referred to some anecdotal evidence of increasing
concern among business contacts about future prospects for exports of manufactured goods.
On the other hand, any depreciation in the foreign exchange value of the dollar as the
economy slowed would help to bolster exports.
Against the backdrop of slowing economic growth, core inflation had remained quiescent.
Views regarding the outlook for inflation were somewhat mixed, though all the members
agreed that the risks of higher inflation had diminished materially. Nonetheless, some
members noted that while recent anecdotal reports pointed to a modest reduction in labor
market strains in some areas and industries, labor markets in general were still very tight and
likely would remain taut relative to historical experience. In such circumstances, if structural
productivity growth leveled out, worker efforts to catch up to past increases in productivity
could put pressures on labor compensation costs. The latter could well be augmented by
sharply rising medical costs and by attempts to protect the purchasing power of wages from
the erosion caused by the rise in energy prices. Further depreciation of the dollar in relation
to major foreign currencies would add to import prices and domestic inflation pressures. But
there were also a number of reasons for optimism about the outlook for consumer prices over
coming quarters. Growth in economic activity at a pace somewhat below that of the
economy's output potential would lessen pressures on labor and other resources from levels
that had, in the past few years, been associated with at most a small uptick in core inflation.
Indications that rapid growth in structural productivity would persist and widespread reports
that strong competitive pressures in most markets continued to inhibit business efforts to
increase prices in the face of rising costs also were favorable factors in the outlook. Further
declines in oil prices, as evidenced by quotations in futures markets, would if realized have
effects not only on so-called headline inflation but would help hold down core prices over
time. Despite previous increases in headline inflation, survey and other measures of inflation
expectations continued to suggest that long-run inflation expectations had not risen and might
even have fallen a bit of late as the economy softened.
In the Committee's discussion of policy for the intermeeting period ahead, all the members
indicated that they could support an unchanged policy stance, consistent with a federal funds

rate averaging about 6-1/2 percent. However, they also endorsed a proposal calling for a shift
in the balance of risks statement to be issued after this meeting to express the view that most
members believed the risks were now weighted toward conditions that could generate
economic weakness in the foreseeable future. In their evaluation of the appropriate policy for
these changing circumstances, the members agreed that the critical issue was whether the
expansion would stabilize near its recent growth rate or was continuing to slow. In the view
of almost all the members, the currently available information bearing on this issue was not
sufficient to warrant an easing at this point. Much of the usual aggregative data on spending
and employment, although to be sure available only with a lag, continued to suggest
moderate economic expansion. The information pointing to further weakness was very recent
and to an important extent anecdotal. As a consequence, most of the members were
persuaded that a prudent policy course would be to await further confirmation of a
weakening expansion before easing, particularly in light of the high level of resource
utilization and the experience of recent years when several lulls in the growth of the economy
had been followed by a resumption of very robust economic expansion. Additional evidence
of slowing economic growth might well materialize in the weeks immediately ahead--from
the regular aggregated monthly data releases, but also from weekly readings on the labor
market and reports from businesses on the strength of sales and production--and the members
agreed that the Committee should be prepared to respond promptly to indications of further
weakness in the economy. Those few members who expressed a preference for easing at this
meeting believed that, with unit labor costs and inflation expectations contained, enough
evidence of further weakness already existed to warrant an immediate action. Nonetheless,
they could accept a delay in light of prevailing uncertainties about the prospective
performance of the economy and the intention of the Committee to act promptly in coming
weeks, including the possibility of an easing move early in the intermeeting period, should
confirming information on weakening trends in the economy emerge.
With regard to the consensus in favor of moving from an assessment of risks weighted
toward rising inflation to one that was weighted toward economic weakness, with no
intermediate issuance of a balanced risks assessment, some members observed that such a
change was likely to be viewed as a relatively rapid shift by some observers. The revised
statement of risks, even though it would not be associated with an easing move, could
strengthen expectations regarding future monetary policy easing to an extent that was
difficult to predict and could generate sizable reactions in financial markets. At the same
time, it might raise questions about why the Committee did not alter the stance of policy.
Nonetheless, the Committee's reasons for not easing today were deemed persuasive by most
members, while shifting its statement about economic risks seemed clearly justified by recent
developments. In one view, even though the risks of a weakening economy had increased, a
statement of balanced risks would be preferable because further moderation in the expansion
might well fail to materialize.
At the conclusion of this 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:
The Federal Open Market Committee seeks monetary and financial conditions
that will foster price stability and promote sustainable growth in output. To
further its long-run objectives, the Committee in the immediate future seeks
conditions in reserve markets consistent with maintaining the federal funds rate

at an average of around 6-1/2 percent.
The vote also encompassed approval of the sentence below for inclusion in the press
statement to be released shortly after the meeting:
Against the background of its long-run goals of price stability and sustainable
economic growth and of the information currently available, the Committee
believes that the risks are weighted mainly toward conditions that may generate
economic weakness in the foreseeable future.
Votes for this action: Messrs. Greenspan, McDonough, Broaddus, Ferguson,
Gramlich, Guynn, Jordan, Kelley, Meyer, and Parry.
Votes against this action: None.
This meeting adjourned at 1:35 p.m. with the understanding that the next regularly scheduled
meeting of the Committee would be held on Tuesday-Wednesday, January 30-31, 2001.
Telephone Conference Meeting
A telephone conference meeting was held on January 3, 2001, for the purpose of considering
a policy easing action. In keeping with the Committee's Rules of Organization, the members
at the start of the meeting unanimously re-elected Alan Greenspan as Chairman of the
Federal Open Market Committee and William J. McDonough as Vice Chairman. Their terms
of office were extended for one year until the first meeting of the Committee after December
31, 2001. By unanimous vote, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York was selected to
execute transactions for the System Open Market Account until the adjournment of the first
meeting of the Committee after December 31, 2001.
At its meeting on December 19, 2000, the Committee had contemplated the possibility that
ongoing economic and financial developments might warrant a reassessment of the stance of
monetary policy prior to the next scheduled meeting in late January. Information that had
become available since the December meeting tended to confirm that the economic
expansion had continued to weaken. The manufacturing sector was especially soft, reflecting
apparent efforts in a number of industries to readjust inventories that were now deemed to be
too high, notably those related to motor vehicles. Retail sales were appreciably below
business expectations for the holiday season despite some pickup in the latter half of
December, apparently largely induced by price discounting, and sales of motor vehicles
evidenced significant further weakness as the month progressed. Business confidence
appeared to have deteriorated further since the December meeting amid widespread reports
of reductions in planned production and capital spending. Elevated energy costs were
continuing to drain consumer purchasing power and were adding to the costs of many
business firms, with adverse effects on profits and stock market valuations. Interacting with
these developments were forecasts of further declines in business profits over coming
quarters. On the more positive side, housing activity appeared to be responding to lower
mortgage interest rates, and on the whole nonresidential construction activity seemed to be
reasonably well maintained. Moreover, while the expansion had weakened and economic
activity might remain soft in the near term, the longer-term outlook for reasonably sustained
economic expansion, supported by easier financial conditions and the response of investment
and consumption to rising productivity and living standards, was still quite good. Inflation
expectations appeared to be declining, with businesses continuing to encounter marked and

even increased resistance to their efforts to raise prices. On balance, the information already
in hand indicated that the expansion clearly was weakening and by more than had been
anticipated. In the circumstances, prompt and forceful policy action sooner and larger than
expected by financial markets seemed called for.
Against this background, all the members supported a proposal for an easing of reserve
conditions consistent with a reduction of 50 basis points in the federal funds rate to a level of
6 percent. 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:
The Federal Open Market Committee seeks monetary and financial conditions
that will foster price stability and promote sustainable growth in output. To
further its long-run objectives, the Committee in the immediate future seeks
conditions in reserve markets consistent with a reduction in the federal funds rate
to an average of around 6 percent.
The vote encompassed approval of the sentence below for inclusion in the press statement to
be released shortly after the meeting:
Against the background of its long-run goals of price stability and sustainable
economic growth and of the information currently available, the Committee
believes that the risks are weighted mainly toward conditions that may generate
economic weakness in the foreseeable future.
Votes for this action: Messrs. Greenspan, McDonough, Ferguson, Gramlich,
Hoenig, Kelley, Meyer, Minehan, Moskow, and Poole.
Votes against this action: None.
Chairman Greenspan indicated that shortly after this meeting the Board of Governors would
consider pending requests by several Federal Reserve Banks to reduce the discount rate by 25
basis points. At the time of this conference call meeting, no pending requests for a 50 basis
point reduction were outstanding, but the press release would indicate that the Board would
be prepared to consider requests for further reductions of 25 basis points if they were
received.
Donald L. Kohn
Secretary

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