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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, March 21,
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, Poole, and Stewart, Alternate Members
of the Federal Open Market Committee
Messrs. Boehne, McTeer, and Stern, Presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks of
Philadelphia, Dallas, and Minneapolis respectively
Mr. Kohn, Secretary and Economist
Mr. Bernard, Deputy Secretary
Ms. Fox, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Gillum, Assistant Secretary
Mr. Mattingly, General Counsel
Ms. Johnson, Economist
Mr. Prell, Economist
Ms. Cumming, Messrs. Eisenbeis, Goodfriend, Howard, Lindsey, Reinhart, Simpson,
and Stockton, 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
Messrs. Madigan and Slifman, Associate Directors, Divisions of Monetary Affairs
and Research and Statistics respectively, Board of Governors

Messrs. Struckmeyer and Whitesell, Assistant Directors, Divisions of Research and
Statistics and Monetary Affairs respectively, Board of Governors
Ms. Low, Open Market Secretariat Assistant, Division of Monetary Affairs, Board of
Governors
Ms. Browne, Messrs. Hakkio and Hunter, Ms. Krieger, Messrs. Lang, Rasche, and
Rosenblum, Senior Vice Presidents, Federal Reserve Banks of Boston, Kansas City,
Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Dallas respectively
Mr. Bryan, Assistant Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Mr. Weber, Senior Research Officer, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis
Mr. Rudebusch, Senior Research Officer, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

By unanimous vote, the minutes of the meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee held
on February 1-2, 2000, were approved.
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, and thus no vote was required
of the Committee.
The Manager also reported on developments in domestic financial markets and on System
open market transactions in government securities and federal agency obligations during the
period February 2, 2000, through March 20, 2000. By unanimous vote, the Committee
ratified these transactions.
At its meeting in August 1999, the Committee had voted to expand the collateral that could
be accepted in System repurchase transactions and had authorized the use of reverse
repurchase agreements. These authorizations were scheduled to expire at the end of April
2000. At this meeting the Manager proposed that the authority to use the broader range of
collateral be extended until the first meeting in 2001 and that the authority to engage in
reverse repurchase agreements be made permanent.
The principal effect of the expanded collateral authorized last August, together with the use
of tri-party repurchase agreements, was to allow passthrough mortgage securities of GNMA,
FNMA, and FHLMC and "stripped" securities of the U.S. Treasury and federal government
agencies to be taken as collateral for repurchase transactions. Direct Treasury obligations
remained the preferred means for meeting the System's needs, but anticipated paydowns of
marketable federal debt associated with projected budget surpluses were likely to limit the
System's ability in the future to continue to add substantially to holdings, even on a
temporary basis, without generating undesirable market repercussions.
In this setting, the Manager recommended that a broad-gauge study be undertaken to
consider alternative asset classes and selection criteria that could be appropriate for the
System Open Market Account (SOMA), with particular attention to alternatives to the
current reliance on net additions to outright holdings of Treasury securities as the sole means

of effectuating the upward trend in the asset side of the System's balance sheet.
Pending the completion of that study and the Committee's consideration of alternative asset
allocations, the Manager suggested that the Desk could rely on temporary operations with
relatively long maturities to meet the growth in underlying reserve needs that could not
comfortably be met by further outright purchases of Treasury securities. In implementing
these temporary operations, the Manager expressed a preference to distribute the System's
demand for collateral as broadly as possible in order to minimize the impact on spread
relationships in the financing market. This preference motivated his recommendation to
extend temporarily the authority to operate in the broader range of collateral.
The required size of the longer-term temporary operations would depend on how much of the
permanent reserve need could be met by outright purchases of Treasury securities. The
Manager noted that the desirability of maintaining a liquid bill portfolio suggested that
System holdings of any bill issue should be limited to 35-40 percent of the outstanding
amount. With issue sizes declining, such limits might mean that from time to time some
portion of the System's maturing bill holdings would be redeemed rather than rolled over in
Treasury auctions. The Manager also intended to roll over maturing holdings of Treasury
coupon issues in auctions and to add to the System's portfolio to meet permanent reserve
needs by purchasing coupon securities in the secondary market. However, the amount that
could be added through outright purchases without disturbing the Treasury market would
have to be gauged over time relative to conditions in the market as Treasury issuance patterns
evolved in response to System purchases and Treasury buybacks of coupon securities.
All the members endorsed the proposal for a study of the issues associated with the System's
asset allocation in light of declining Treasury debt. They noted that the requested temporary
expansion of authority, pending the Committee's consideration of the completed study,
should not be read as indicating in any way how the Committee might ultimately choose to
allocate the portfolio, and any interim operations in the broader range of collateral should be
capable of being unwound without adverse market consequences.
At the conclusion of this discussion, the Committee voted unanimously to extend the
suspension of several provisions of the "Guidelines for the Conduct of System Operations in
Federal Agency Issues" until the first regularly scheduled meeting in 2001.
The Committee also accepted a proposal by the Manager to make permanent the authority to
use reverse repurchase agreements in the conduct of open market operations. Such
agreements are equivalent to matched sale-purchase transactions, which the Manager has
long been authorized to use, but reverse RPs have the advantage of much greater flexibility
because they are the common practice in financial markets. The Manager indicated that he
did not expect to use reverse RPs on a regular basis until the System's new trading system
became operational, but in conjunction with existing tri-party arrangements there might be
occasions in the interim when the timing of open market operations would make it desirable
to use them instead of matched sale-purchase transactions. The members voted unanimously
to adopt on a permanent basis, subject to the annual review required for all the Committee's
instruments, paragraph 1 (c) of the Authorization for Domestic Open Market Operations in
the form reproduced below.
1. The Federal Open Market Committee authorizes and directs the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York, to the extent necessary to carry out the most recent domestic policy

directive adopted at a meeting of the Committee:
(c) To sell U.S. Government securities and securities that are direct obligations of, or
fully guaranteed as to principal and interest by, any agency of the United States to
dealers for System Open Market Account under agreements for the resale by dealers of
such securities or obligations in 90 calendar days or less, at rates that, unless otherwise
expressly authorized by the Committee, shall be determined by competitive bidding,
after applying reasonable limitations on the volume of agreements with individual
dealers.
The Committee then turned to a discussion of the economic and financial outlook and the
implementation of monetary policy over the intermeeting period ahead.
The information reviewed at this meeting suggested that the expansion of economic activity
remained rapid. Consumer spending and business fixed investment were still trending
upward strongly, and housing demand was holding at a high level. Although the growth in
domestic demand was being met partly through rising imports, industrial production and
nonfarm payrolls were expanding briskly. Labor markets continued to be very tight, but there
were few signs of any acceleration in labor costs. Price inflation was still moderate, except
for the upturn in energy prices in recent months.
Labor demand remained robust in January and February, with the average increase in private
nonfarm payroll employment over the two months only a little below the strong pace of
1999. Job growth in manufacturing and construction was solid, while hiring in the services
sector slowed appreciably. The civilian unemployment rate, at 4.1 percent in February, was
just above its 1999 low, and initial claims for unemployment insurance were at an extremely
low level in early March.
Industrial production was up sharply in the early months of the year, reflecting large gains in
the manufacturing and utilities sectors. Within manufacturing, output of high-tech equipment
was notably strong, but production of motor vehicles and parts also recorded a sizable
advance on balance over the January-February period. By contrast, output of aircraft and
parts weakened again. The continuing strength in manufacturing lifted the factory operating
rate further, but capacity utilization stayed a little below its long-term average.
Retail sales continued to increase rapidly in January and February against the backdrop of
strong growth in disposable income and household wealth and elevated consumer
confidence. Sales of light vehicles surged over the January-February period. Purchases of
goods other than motor vehicles picked up substantially further, with gains widespread across
most major categories. Outlays for services rose briskly in January (latest data); part of the
gain resulted from higher spending for heating as temperatures in many parts of the country
dropped to more seasonable levels.
Residential housing activity remained strong in the first two months of the year. Total private
housing starts in January and February held at the high December level, as a surge in starts of
multifamily units offset a downturn in starts of single-family homes. The demand for
housing, associated with continuing gains in jobs and incomes, had remained ebullient
despite an appreciable increase in mortgage rates. Although sales of new single-family
homes fell in January (latest data), the decline followed a December pace that was the highest
monthly rate in more than twenty years. Sales of existing homes also declined in January,

continuing a trend that had begun last July, but inventories of existing homes for sale
evidently were at very low levels.
Business spending on durable equipment and software and on nonresidential structures
increased sharply in January. Shipments of computing and communications equipment
surged after the century rollover, and shipments of other non-aircraft goods rose moderately.
Deliveries of aircraft continued to be held down by the labor strike at Boeing. The recent
strength in orders for many types of equipment pointed to further advances in spending in
coming months. Expenditures for nonresidential structures turned up last autumn and rose
rapidly in January. Office and other commercial construction activity was robust, while
industrial building was little changed.
The pace of accumulation of manufacturing and trade inventories slowed somewhat in
January from the elevated rate in the fourth quarter; however, sales grew briskly and the
aggregate inventory-sales ratio edged down from an already very low level. In
manufacturing, stocks increased moderately further in January; however, shipments grew by
more, and the aggregate stock-shipments ratio for the sector declined to a new low. Both
wholesale and retail inventories increased in line with sales, and inventory-sales ratios for
these sectors stayed at the bottom of their respective ranges over the past twelve months.
The U.S. trade deficit in goods and services climbed to a new high in January, with the value
of exports retreating from the peak reached in December and the value of imports rising
sharply. The drop in exports was concentrated in computers, semiconductors, aircraft,
chemicals, and consumer goods, while the increase in imports was primarily in oil and
automotive products. The available information suggested that economic expansion
continued to be robust in most foreign industrial economies. The Japanese economy was still
the notable exception, though some favorable signs were evident. Economic activity in the
developing countries also picked up further, with Asian countries registering the largest
gains.
Price inflation had remained moderate in recent months, with the exception of higher energy
prices. Consumer prices jumped in February as energy prices surged. Abstracting from
energy prices, however, consumer price inflation was moderate in January and February.
Moreover, the increase in consumer prices of items other than food and energy during the
twelve months ended in February was the same as the change during the previous
twelve-month period. At the producer level, prices of finished goods other than food and
energy changed little in January and February, and their rise during the twelve months ended
in February was somewhat smaller than the advance during the previous twelve-month
period. At earlier stages of processing, however, producer prices registered somewhat larger
increases than those for finished goods in both the January-February period and the twelve
months ended in February. With regard to labor costs, average hourly earnings grew at a
slightly faster rate in January and February than they had in the fourth quarter of last year.
However, the advance in this earnings measure in the twelve months ended in February was
about the same as that in the previous twelve-month period.
At its meeting on February 1-2, 2000, the Committee adopted a directive that called for a
slight tightening of conditions in reserve markets consistent with an increase of ¼ percentage
point in the federal funds rate to an average of about 5-3/4 percent. The members agreed that
this action was needed to help bring the growth of aggregate demand into better alignment
with the expansion of potential aggregate supply and thereby help avert rising inflationary

pressures. The members also agreed that the risks remained weighted mainly in the direction
of greater inflation pressures and that further tightening actions might be necessary to bring
about financial conditions that were sufficiently firm to contain upward pressures on labor
costs and prices.
Open market operations during the intermeeting period were directed toward implementing
the desired slightly greater pressure on reserve positions, and the federal funds rate averaged
very close to the Committee's 5-3/4 percent target. The Committee's action and its
announcement that the risks were weighted in the direction of rising inflation were widely
anticipated and had little immediate effect on market yields. Subsequently, market rates
moved up in response to the receipt of data that signaled persisting strength of the economy,
but they turned back down in response to new information indicating continued low inflation
and to greater volatility in equity prices. On balance over the intermeeting period, interest
rates on private instruments registered small mixed changes while yields on longer-term
Treasury securities declined significantly. Most major indexes of equity prices moved up
appreciably on net over the intermeeting period.
In foreign exchange markets, the trade-weighted value of the dollar changed little over the
intermeeting period against a basket of major currencies. The dollar rose against the
Australian dollar, British pound, Canadian dollar, and the euro as investors apparently revised
down their expectations of the extent of monetary tightening in those countries. By contrast,
the dollar declined against the Japanese yen and the currencies of a number of other
important trading partners, notably the Mexican peso and the Brazilian real.
The growth of M2 and M3 slowed in February, partly reflecting an unwinding of Y2K effects
and rising opportunity costs of holding liquid balances. In addition, the surging prices of
technology-related equities might have spurred depositors to shift some of their M2 balances
into equity mutual funds. The growth of total domestic nonfinancial debt slowed early in the
year as large federal debt paydowns resumed following the sharp buildup of Treasury
balances prior to year-end.
The staff forecast prepared for this meeting suggested that the economic expansion would
moderate gradually from its currently elevated pace to a rate around, or perhaps a little
below, the growth of the economy's estimated potential. The expansion of domestic final
demand increasingly would be held back by the anticipated waning of positive wealth effects
associated with large earlier gains in equity prices and by higher interest rates. As a result,
the growth of spending on consumer durables and houses was expected to slow; in addition,
business investment in equipment and software was projected to decelerate following a firstquarter surge that partly reflected information technology expenditures that had been
postponed until after the century rollover. In addition, solid economic expansion abroad was
expected to boost the growth of U.S. exports for some period ahead. Core price inflation was
projected to increase somewhat over the forecast horizon, partly as a result of rising import
prices and some firming of gains in nominal labor compensation in persistently tight labor
markets that would not be fully offset by productivity growth.
In the Committee's discussion of current and prospective economic developments, members
commented, as they had at earlier meetings, that they saw little evidence of any slowing in
the rapid expansion of domestic economic activity, but they also saw few signs to date of
significant acceleration in inflation. The growth in aggregate demand continued to display
remarkable vigor, evidently driven by high levels of consumer and business confidence and

accommodative financial markets. Large increases in imports were helping to satisfy the
impressive growth in demand. At the same time, aggregate supply also continued to record
strong gains amid indications of further acceleration in productivity. Looking ahead,
however, members reiterated earlier concerns that aggregate demand could continue to grow
faster than potential aggregate supply, even under optimistic assumptions regarding future
productivity gains. Contributing to that continuing imbalance, the strengthening of most
foreign industrial economies and the diminishing effects of the earlier appreciation of the
dollar were likely to boost further foreign demand for U.S. output. The experience of recent
years amply demonstrated, however, that the extent to which prospective growth in demand
might exceed further expansion in the economy's potential and the implications for inflation
were subject to a wide range of uncertainty as to both degree and timing. Nonetheless, given
the persistence of rapid growth in aggregate demand beyond growth in aggregate supply and
very tight conditions in labor markets, the members continued to be concerned about the
risks of rising inflation.
In their comments about economic conditions across the nation, members referred to
anecdotal and other evidence of widespread strength in business activity, which in many
areas appeared to be rising appreciably further from already high levels. Agriculture
continued to be a notable exception, though members also reported signs of softening in
housing and other construction activity in some areas. With regard to developments in key
sectors of the economy, consumer spending had remained particularly robust thus far this
year according to reports from most parts of the nation. Some moderation in such spending to
a pace more in line with the growth in household incomes was cited as a reasonable
expectation, given underlying factors such as the large buildup of durable goods in consumer
hands, the rise in consumer debt loads, and the effects of higher oil prices. Of key importance
was the prospective performance of the stock market, whose robust gains in recent years had
undoubtedly boosted consumer confidence and spending. The members noted that equity
prices generally had posted further gains during the intermeeting period, but in their view the
large increases of recent years were not likely to be repeated, and an absence of such gains
would have a restraining effect on consumer expenditures over time. Even so, further
increases in household incomes along with the lagged wealth effects of the sharp earlier
advances in stock market prices seemed likely to sustain relatively strong consumer spending
for some period of time.
After moderating toward the end of 1999, in part because of caution ahead of the century
date change, business fixed investment again appeared to be expanding at a vigorous pace.
The advance included not only notable strength in the high-tech sector but brisk spending in
a number of other areas as well. Factors underlying business optimism included robust
growth in revenues and profits and the ready availability of both debt and equity financing.
The divergence, at least until recently, in the stock market between the valuations of
high-tech firms and those of more traditional, established firms was inducing a redirection of
investment funds to business activities that were perceived to be more productive. While the
associated capital investments undoubtedly had contributed to the acceleration in
productivity, some members expressed concern that the historically elevated valuations of
many high-tech stocks were subject to a sizable market adjustment at some point. That risk
was underscored by the increased volatility of the stock market.
In the housing sector, building activity generally remained at a high level, though slipping a
bit in some parts of the country, and there were only limited indications that the rise in

mortgage interest rates was holding down residential construction. On the other hand,
housing and other construction activity reportedly was being retarded by shortages of labor
and, in some areas, of materials as well. On balance, recent developments did not augur any
significant changes in homebuilding.
The improved economic outlook for most of the nation's important trading partners, in
association with the fading effects of the dollar's earlier appreciation, pointed to faster
expansion in exports and recent anecdotal reports were broadly consistent with such a
development. Growth in imports was expected to moderate over time, though imports
currently were still rising rapidly. Even so, prospective developments in the foreign trade
sector were not likely to provide much relief to demand pressures on the U.S. economy.
With regard to the outlook for inflation, members saw little evidence to date of any
acceleration in core inflation, and unit costs for nonfinancial corporations were unchanged in
the fourth quarter. Despite such welcome developments, members expressed concern about
indications of a less benign inflation climate. The direct and indirect effects of higher fuel
prices, the rise in other import prices, increasing medical costs, and some deterioration in
surveys of inflation expectations could begin to show through to higher underlying inflation.
More fundamentally, however, the members believed that current growth in aggregate
demand, should it persist, would continue to exceed the expansion of potential output and, by
putting added pressure on already tight labor markets, would at some point foster inflationary
imbalances that would undermine the economic expansion.
In the Committee's discussion of policy for the intermeeting period ahead, all the members
endorsed a proposal to tighten reserve conditions by a slight amount consistent with an
increase in the federal funds rate to a level of 6 percent. Persisting strength in aggregate
domestic demand had been accommodated thus far without a pickup in underlying inflation
because of the remarkable acceleration in productivity and because of two safety valves--the
economy's ability to draw on the pool of available workers and to finance the rapid growth in
imports relative to exports. However, a further acceleration in productivity was unlikely to
boost the economy's growth potential sufficiently to satisfy the expansion in aggregate
demand without some slowing in the latter. In addition, the two safety valves could not be
counted on to work indefinitely. In these circumstances, the members saw substantial risks of
rising pressures on labor and other resources and of higher inflation that called for some
further firming of monetary policy at this meeting. They agreed, though, that because a
significant acceleration in inflation did not appear to be imminent and because uncertainties
continued to surround the economic outlook, a gradual approach to policy adjustments was
warranted. Some members commented that, although a more forceful policy move of 50
basis points might be needed at some point, measured and predictable policy tightening
moves, such as the one contemplated today, still were desirable in current circumstances,
which included somewhat unsettled financial markets.
Looking ahead, the Committee would continue to assess the need for further tightening to
contain inflation. Even after taking account of the lagged effects of the considerable
tightening that already had been implemented since mid-1999, additional tightening might
well be needed to ensure that financial conditions would adjust sufficiently to bring
aggregate demand into better balance with potential supply and thereby counter a possible
escalation of pressures on labor costs and prices. The members agreed that the press
statement to be issued shortly after this meeting should continue to highlight their view that
even after today's tightening move the risks would remain tilted toward heightened inflation

pressures.
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 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 increasing the federal funds rate to
an average of around 6 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 the risks are weighted mainly toward conditions that may generate
heightened inflation pressures 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.
The meeting was recessed briefly after this vote and the members of the Board of Governors
left the room to vote on increases in the discount rate that were pending at several Federal
Reserve Banks. On the Board members' return, Chairman Greenspan announced that the
Board had approved a ¼ percentage point increase in the discount rate to a level of 5-1/2
percent. The Committee concluded its meeting with a review of the press release announcing
the joint policy action.
It was agreed that the next meeting of the Committee would be held on Tuesday, May 16,
2000.
The meeting adjourned at 12:50 p.m.
Donald L. Kohn
Secretary
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Last update: March 23, 2000, 2:00 PM