View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

March 16, 2004
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, March 16, 2004, at 9:00 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Greenspan, Chairman
Mr. Geithner, Vice Chairman
Mr. Bernanke
Ms. Bies
Mr. Ferguson
Mr. Gramlich
Mr. Hoenig
Mr. Kohn
Ms. Minehan
Mr. Olson
Ms. Pianalto
Mr. Poole
Messrs. McTeer, Moskow, Santomero, and Stern, Alternate Members of the Federal
Open Market Committee
Messrs. Broaddus, Guynn, and Parry, Presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks of
Richmond, Atlanta, and San Francisco respectively
Mr. Reinhart, Secretary and Economist
Mr. Bernard, Deputy Secretary
Ms. Smith, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Mattingly, General Counsel
Ms. Johnson, Economist
Mr. Stockton, Economist
Messrs. Connors, Fuhrer, Howard, Madigan, Rasche, Sniderman, Slifman, and
Wilcox, Associate Economists
Mr. Kos, Manager, System Open Market Account
Mr. Ettin, Deputy Director, Division of Research and Statistics, Board of Governors
Messrs. Struckmeyer and Oliner, Associate Directors, Division of Research and
Statistics, Board of Governors
Messrs. Clouse, Freeman, and Whitesell, Deputy Associate Directors, Divisions of
Monetary Affairs, International Finance, and Monetary Affairs respectively, Board of

Governors
Mr. English, Assistant Director, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Mr. Skidmore, Special Assistant to the Board, Office of Board Members, Board of
Governors
Mr. Sack, Section Chief, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of Governors
Mr. Luecke, Senior Financial Analyst, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of
Governors
Ms. Low, Open Market Secretariat Assistant, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of
Governors
Mr. Moore, First Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Messrs. Eisenbeis, Evans, Judd, Lacker, Mses. Mester and Perelmuter, Messrs.
Rolnick, Rosenblum, and Steindel, Senior Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of
Atlanta, Chicago, San Francisco, Richmond, Philadelphia, New York, Minneapolis,
Dallas, and New York, respectively
Mr. Kahn, Vice President, Federal Reserve Banks of Kansas City
The Manager of the System Open Market Account 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 Manager also reported on developments in domestic financial markets and on System
open market transactions in government securities and securities issued or fully guaranteed
by federal agencies during the period January 28, 2004, through March 15, 2004. By
unanimous vote, the Committee ratified these transactions.
The information reviewed at this meeting suggested that economic activity continued to
expand at a solid pace in early 2004. Consumer spending growth appeared to have picked up
somewhat, and activity in the housing market remained at high levels. In the business sector,
spending for equipment and software was apparently advancing vigorously, and firms were
adding modestly to their inventories. Still, the increases in economic activity had not yet
generated sizable gains in employment. Core consumer price inflation remained low, and
expectations of future inflation continued to be subdued.
The January and February employment reports depicted a labor market that was slow to pick
up momentum. The modest gains posted in private nonfarm payrolls over the period were
smaller than had been expected by most forecasters. Employment in the manufacturing
sector, which had fallen continually for over three years, was essentially unchanged in
February, while employment in other sectors showed mixed changes. Average weekly hours
of production or nonsupervisory workers edged above the average level of the fourth quarter
of 2003. Despite the weakness in employment, the unemployment rate in January and
February came in below its fourth-quarter level.
Industrial production moved up briskly in January and February following strong increases in

the fourth quarter. These gains in production were realized across a wide set of industries.
High-tech industries, including semiconductors, computers, and communications equipment,
posted particularly strong advances, while the production of motor vehicles and the output of
other manufacturing sectors were also strong. Outside the manufacturing sector, power
generation by utilities surged in January but fell back in February in response to outsized
swings in average temperatures during those months. Capacity utilization continued to move
higher in January and February, although it remained below its longer-run average.
Consumer spending growth in recent months appeared to pick up somewhat from its pace in
the fourth quarter of 2003. Retail sales rose briskly, on average, in January and February, and
spending on services was up in January (the most recent month for which data were
available). In contrast, purchases of motor vehicles slipped in January and February from the
strong pace in the fourth quarter. Overall, expenditures were supported by sizable gains in
real disposable personal income and increases in household wealth owing to rising home and
equity prices. Disposable income was boosted by significant growth in private wages and
salaries and by a drop in taxes that was due to the lower final payments and higher refunds
associated with last year's tax cut. Surveys indicated that consumer sentiment moved higher
in January but subsequently fell back. Despite the pullback, sentiment remained above the
levels seen during most of 2003.
Activity in the housing market moderated in January and February from its elevated pace in
the fourth quarter. Single-family housing starts and permits stepped down, although both
measures remained above their average levels of the first three quarters of 2003. Housing
starts in the multifamily sector slipped only slightly from the fourth quarter pace, even
though vacancy rates reached a record high level in the fourth quarter. Sales of new and
existing homes slowed in January, but this change retraced only a small part of the
extraordinary run-up in home sales that began last spring. Home prices continued to rise
briskly.
Spending on capital goods had advanced at a vigorous pace in the fourth quarter and
appeared to be continuing that growth early this year. Spending by businesses was supported
by increases in their sales and the continuation of strong cash flows and a low user cost of
capital. Nominal shipments of computing and communication equipment moved up sharply
in recent months, as did shipments outside the high-tech sector. By contrast, business
investment in transportation equipment was mixed. Data for new orders of nondefense
capital goods excluding aircraft suggested that the strength in capital expenditures would
continue going forward. As has been the case for some time, real spending on private
nonresidential structures languished, and vacancies in industrial buildings and office
properties were at high levels.
Real nonfarm inventory investment remained modest in recent months. Although
manufacturers' inventories moved higher in January, that increase primarily reflected
stockbuilding at producers of petroleum and coal products. Retail inventories also rose in
January, as stocks at auto dealers increased; wholesalers accumulated inventories at a modest
pace. Inventory-sales ratios in these sectors lingered at or near their historical lows.
The U.S. international trade deficit rose to a record high level in January. Exports of goods
and services fell, owing importantly to a drop in agricultural exports. Imports edged lower,
with higher oil imports partly offsetting declines in most other categories. Recent data
suggested that economic activity in major foreign industrial countries strengthened outside

the euro area, notably including a sizable jump in Japan's output in the fourth quarter. Growth
in the euro area remained tepid.
Core consumer price inflation stayed very low in early 2004. Over the twelve months ending
in January, the increase in core consumer prices was around 1 percent--about ¾ percentage
point below the increase over the preceding twelve months. Total consumer price inflation,
however, was boosted in January by a surge in energy prices. Incoming information on trends
in labor costs were more mixed. The average hourly earnings of production or
nonsupervisory workers on private nonfarm payrolls rose modestly over the twelve months
ending in February, decelerating from its year-earlier pace. By contrast, the employment cost
index for hourly compensation in private industry grew a bit faster over the twelve months
ending in December than over the year-earlier period.
At its meeting on January 27-28, 2004, the Federal Open Market Committee decided to leave
its target for the federal funds rate unchanged at 1 percent. The Committee also retained its
assessment that the upside and downside risks to the attainment of sustainable growth were
roughly equal as well as its judgment that the probability of an unwelcome fall in inflation
had diminished and was almost equal to that of a rise in inflation. With inflation low and
resource use slack, the Committee saw no need for tightening policy in the near future.
However, to provide additional flexibility to adjust monetary policy at a later date once such
action was deemed appropriate given economic developments, the Committee removed from
its post-meeting statement the explicit reference to a "considerable period" and substituted a
statement that conveyed the sense that it could be patient in removing its policy
accommodation.
Although the Committee's decision at the January meeting to keep the federal funds rate
unchanged had been widely anticipated, the changes in the wording of the accompanying
statement elicited a sharp reaction in financial markets. Investors moved up the date when
they expected policy tightening to commence, resulting in a jump in Treasury yields. Over
the balance of the intermeeting period, however, the Chairman's testimony on monetary
policy and data on nonfarm payroll employment with a weakish cast persuaded investors that
policy tightening was still some ways off. Treasury yields declined considerably in response
and ended the intermeeting period lower, on balance. Yields on inflation-indexed securities
also fell, leaving measures of inflation compensation little changed.
Yields on investment-grade bonds generally moved in tandem with those on Treasuries over
the intermeeting period, but spreads on high-yield bonds widened as investors reassessed
credit risks in light of the negative tone of some incoming economic data. The disappointing
employment data and renewed concerns about terrorism contributed to a decline in broad
equity price indexes. Technology-related issues, which had registered very large gains over
the preceding year or so, fell more sharply. The foreign exchange value of the dollar against
other major currencies declined through the middle of February but subsequently rebounded
to end the intermeeting period higher.
After four consecutive months of decline, M2 rose slightly in January and accelerated
markedly in February. The effects of mortgage refinancing, which had depressed M2 growth
in the second half of last year, appeared to wane, allowing the expansion in nominal income
to show through to M2 growth.
The staff forecast prepared for this meeting indicated that economic activity would continue

to expand at a solid pace through 2005. Monetary policy is expected to support growth over
the projection period, and fiscal policy is anticipated to remain accommodative through 2004.
In addition, structural productivity growth is projected to remain substantial this year and
next. Strong advances in real disposable income were expected to keep consumer spending
on a solid upward trajectory. Business spending on equipment and software was seen as
increasing briskly as a result of sizable profits, an improving outlook for demand, and
continued favorable financing conditions. Also, inventory investment was anticipated to rise
gradually as businesses became more convinced that final demand was expanding along a
sustainable track. The pace of economic expansion was forecasted to be sufficient to reduce
resource slack over this year and next, although the employment data received over the
intermeeting period indicated that this process would begin from a higher rate of unused
resources than had been previously expected. Core inflation was projected to remain low
over the forecast period.
In the Committee's discussion of current and prospective economic developments, the
members noted that overall economic activity still seemed to be increasing at a solid pace,
though perhaps not quite as quickly as some members had anticipated at the time of the
January meeting. Investment spending had continued to advance, and the manufacturing
sector, which had lagged the rest of the economy earlier in the expansion, had extended
recent gains. Residential construction activity was down somewhat from the very high levels
posted late last year, but increases in household wealth and the effects of last year's tax cuts
continued to buoy consumer spending. Despite the gains in spending and production,
however, employment growth had been disappointing. While job losses had moderated,
hiring had yet to strengthen, holding down net increases in employment. Nonetheless, the
breadth of the expansion was seen as providing considerable assurance of its sustainability,
and Committee members generally expected that accommodative monetary policy, favorable
financial market conditions, and, at least in the near term, fiscal stimulus would continue to
foster a pace of output growth that exceeded that of its potential. Although economic slack
likely would be declining, it was expected to be a little higher than previously had been
anticipated. Prices for energy, commodities, and non-oil imports were rising, however, and
some business contacts had reported seeing a return of "pricing power." On balance, inflation
was expected to remain near its current low level.
In their discussion of economic developments across the nation, a number of Committee
members noted some slippage in business and consumer confidence from the high levels
reached late last year. While business contacts in some regions remained optimistic about
prospects for their sales and planned to increase investment and, in some cases, employment,
firms in other parts of the country had become somewhat more uncertain about the pace of
the expansion going forward. Those firms, as a result, were more wary about committing to
new investment plans or increased hiring. Financial markets also seemed a little less positive
about the outlook, with stock prices lower and some risk spreads wider than at the time of the
last meeting. The reasons for the reduced optimism were not entirely clear but may have
included higher energy and commodity prices as well as renewed concerns about terrorism.
Some members also pointed to the persistent weakness in employment, which might be seen
as reducing the odds that household spending would continue to expand briskly once the
stimulative effects of tax cuts waned. Lingering business caution likely accounted for a good
deal of the lag in job creation, but some members also pointed to a number of other factors
that might be restraining hiring, including ongoing opportunities to increase efficiency
through organizational changes and new investments, the effects on labor costs of increases

in the costs of benefits, and, in some selected industries and regions, a shortage of job
candidates with appropriate skills. The extent and duration of the resulting restraint on hiring
were difficult to assess, however, and the Committee continued to expect employment
growth to pick up as the expansion progressed.
In their comments about demand in key sectors of the economy, members indicated that
investment spending had continued to expand at a robust pace. Members anticipated vigorous
growth in investment outlays going forward, supported by rapid productivity growth, high
profits and cash flow, and accommodative financial markets. Despite this generally upbeat
assessment, a number of members reported that firms were investing primarily to replace old
equipment or to reduce costs, but remained hesitant to expand capacity. The commercial real
estate sector remained weak, on balance, although some members suggested that market
conditions were stabilizing and, in a few cases, even beginning to improve.
Committee members noted that activity in the housing sector, while still quite elevated, had
fallen back from its extraordinary pace of late last year. However, some of the moderation
may have owed to the effects of severe winter weather rather than more lasting influences,
and the recent decline in mortgage interest rates was expected to support the housing sector
going forward. Reports from some contacts suggested that speculative forces might be
boosting housing demand in some parts of the country, with concomitant effects on prices,
suggesting the possibility that house prices might be moving into the high end of the range
that could be consistent with fundamentals.
Consumer spending outside the auto sector had remained strong, with data and retail contacts
generally suggesting continued growth in sales this year. Committee members noted that
sales had been bolstered by rising asset prices and the effects of last year's tax cuts on refunds
and final payments. By contrast, sales of motor vehicles had fallen back noticeably, reflecting
in part reductions in incentives. However, members anticipated that sales would pick up
again, partly in response to an anticipated rebound in incentives. Looking forward, gains in
employment and the pass-through of higher productivity to wages and salaries were also
expected to boost consumer spending, even as the stimulus to growth from tax cuts faded and
increases in home and equity prices likely slowed from their rapid pace in recent quarters.
The Committee anticipated that government spending would provide some further support
for aggregate demand going forward. The budget pressures that had constrained state and
local government expenditures of late were easing in some cases, and federal outlays were
expected to rise. Fiscal policy was seen as providing less stimulus to aggregate demand in
2005 than this year, but the federal budget deficit was expected to remain substantial.
In their remarks concerning the external sector of the economy, members cited the decline in
the value of the dollar on foreign exchange markets since the middle of last year and stronger
economic growth in many of our trading partners as factors boosting the demand for exports
in a variety of industries. While exports were likely to continue to advance, the value of U.S.
imports was expected to rise as well, implying continued very large current account deficits.
Some Committee members noted that opportunities to cut costs had led some of their
business contacts to consider moving production abroad.
In their review of the outlook for prices, members generally anticipated that core inflation
would remain near current low levels, with output growth only gradually eliminating slack in
labor and goods markets and strong growth in productivity limiting increases in unit labor

costs. Some members thought that core inflation had stabilized and was unlikely to move
lower. Increases in the prices of energy, other commodities, and non-oil imports, as well as
reports from some business contacts that higher costs were increasingly being passed through
to prices, suggested that the downtrend in inflation had ended. Moreover, if, as some
members thought likely, productivity growth slowed as employment picked up, the result
could be reductions in slack accompanied by higher unit labor costs and associated pressures
on prices. Other members were less certain that inflation had leveled out. Recent price trends
were not clear, with some measures of core inflation still declining. Increases in commodity
prices remained limited to a few selected industries, and with the persistence of slack in labor
and product markets, core inflation might well edge lower once any transitory influences had
ebbed. Moreover, if productivity were to expand at a rapid pace rather than slowing, unit
labor costs could fall, putting downward pressure on prices.
In the Committee's discussion of policy for the intermeeting period, all the members favored
the retention of the current target rate of 1 percent for the federal funds rate. This preference
for an unaltered stance of policy was based on the absence of significant changes in
economic conditions or in the members' basic assessment of the outlook since the January
meeting. To be sure, some of the incoming information--notably with regard to labor market
developments--had been somewhat disappointing, but the Committee continued to see the
conditions in place for further solid economic growth. Similarly, despite the rise in energy
and commodity prices and reports of increased pricing power in some sectors, many
Committee members commented that persisting slack in labor and output markets would
keep inflation low. In these circumstances, the current accommodative stance of monetary
policy remained appropriate. Some members, while supporting an unchanged policy at this
meeting, nonetheless emphasized that the maintenance of a very accommodative monetary
policy over an extended period in concert with a stimulative fiscal policy called for careful
attention to the possible emergence of inflationary pressures. And, while adjustments in
financial markets to low rates had generally been consistent with the usual operation of the
monetary transmission mechanism, some members were concerned that keeping monetary
policy stimulative for so long might be encouraging increased leverage and excessive
risk-taking. Such developments could heighten the potential for the emergence of financial
and economic instability when policy tightening proved necessary in the future. At present,
however, the persistence of low inflation coupled with soft labor markets underscored the
desirability of a monetary policy strategy characterized by continued patience.
In the Committee's discussion of its statement to be released shortly after this meeting, the
members saw merit in not changing the characterization of the risks to the outlook for
inflation and economic activity. Many members held that a case could be made for moving to
a balanced risk assessment with regard to the outlook for inflation, with a number of them
expressing a marginal preference for such a change. However, other members thought the
evidence for a balanced risk assessment was not yet compelling and pointed out that with
inflation quite low and slack in labor and output markets likely to persist for a while longer,
the costs to the economy associated with a further decline in inflation likely outweighed
those associated with a comparable increase. While many viewed it as a close call, all
members indicated that they could support a proposal to retain the existing wording
involving a slight tilt toward the possibility of some further disinflation. The members also
agreed on the desirability of retaining the assessment that the risks with regard to the outlook
for economic growth were balanced. Accordingly, it was agreed that the only changes in the
post-meeting statement would be to update the descriptions of the economic expansion and

labor market conditions in light of the information received over the intermeeting period.
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.
"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 1 percent."
The vote encompassed approval of the paragraph below for inclusion in the Committee's
statement to be released shortly after the meeting:
"The Committee perceives that the upside and downside risks to the attainment
of sustainable growth for the next few quarters are roughly equal. The
probability of an unwelcome fall in inflation has diminished in recent months
and now appears almost equal to that of a rise in inflation. With inflation quite
low and resource use slack, the Committee believes that it can be patient in
removing its policy accommodation."
Votes for this action: Messrs. Greenspan, Geithner, Bernanke, Ms. Bies,
Messrs. Ferguson, Gramlich, Hoenig, Kohn, Ms. Minehan, Mr. Olson, Ms.
Pianalto, and Mr. Poole.
Vote against this action: None.
It was agreed that the next meeting of the Committee would be held on Tuesday, May 4,
2004.
The meeting adjourned at 1:00 p.m.
Notation vote
By notation vote completed on March 18, 2004, the Committee unanimously approved the
minutes of the meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee held on January 27-28, 2004.
Vincent R. Reinhart
Secretary
Return to top
FOMC
Home | Monetary policy
Accessibility | Contact Us
Last update: May 6, 2004, 2:00 PM