View original document

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

FEDERAL RESERVE press release

For Use at 4:30 p.m.

December 24. 1992

The Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Open Market
Committee today released the attached record of policy actions
taken by the Federal Open Market Committee at its meeting on
November 17, 1992.
The record for each meeting of the Committee is made
available a few days after the next regularly scheduled meeting
and subsequently is published in the Federal Reserve Bulletin
and the Board's Annual Report.

The summary description of

economic and financial conditions contained in each record is
based solely on the information that was available to the
Committee at the time of the meeting.

Attachment

RECORD OF POLICY ACTIONS OF THE
FEDERAL OPEN MARKET COMMITTEE
Meeting Held on November 17. 1992
1.

Domestic policy directive
The information reviewed at this meeting suggested that

economic activity had been expanding at a moderate pace.

Consumer

spending had picked up somewhat, business purchases of capital
equipment continued to rise at a brisk pace, and housing demand had
increased moderately since midyear.

At the same time, part of these

demands were being met through higher imports, and recent gains in
industrial production and employment had been limited.

Incoming data

on wages and prices had been mixed but suggested on balance a
continuing trend toward lower inflation.
Total nonfarm payroll employment rose slightly in October
after declining in August and September.

Substantial job gains were

recorded in the services industries, especially in health services
and the cyclically sensitive business services, and employment in
construction rebounded from a September decline.

In manufacturing,

the number of jobs declined further in October, although total hours
worked were unchanged as the drop in employment was offset by an
increase in overtime.

Government employment continued to contract,

reflecting the end of a federally funded summer jobs program and early
retirements by postal workers.

Initial claims fell somewhat during

October, and the civilian unemployment rate edged down to 7.4 percent.
Industrial production rose somewhat further in October
following a modest increase in the third quarter.

Much of the October

gain reflected a sharp rise in light truck assemblies, but there was
another sizable advance in the manufacture of office and computing
equipment.

Elsewhere, the production of consumer goods other than

motor vehicles and parts had changed little in recent months, and the
output of defense and space equipment remained on a downward trend in
October.

Utilization of industrial capacity edged higher in October

but was still near its 1991 low.
Retail sales increased appreciably in September and October,
led by a substantial rise in sales at automotive dealers.

Sales at

general merchandisers, apparel outlets, furniture and appliance
stores, and building materials and supplies centers also were up
noticeably over the two months.

Housing starts rose significantly in

August and then edged up further in September to their highest level
since March.

Sales of new homes had increased on balance over recent

months, and the inventory of new homes for sale in September had
reached its lowest level since 1983.
Real outlays for producers' durable equipment posted another
strong increase in the third quarter.

A sharp advance in outlays for

computing equipment outweighed a dropoff in aircraft purchases from an
unsustainably high level in the second quarter.

Purchases of items

other than aircraft and computing equipment rose at a rapid rate in
the third quarter, and recent data on orders for such goods pointed to
additional growth in the near term.

Expenditures for nonresidential

construction, which had fluctuated within a narrow range earlier in
the year, dropped sharply in the third quarter.

Office construction

registered the largest decline, but other commercial and industrial
building also fell considerably.
Business inventories rose only slightly in September, but
over the third quarter as a whole stocks grew at the same rate as in
the second quarter.

In manufacturing, stocks were drawn down in

September, retracing a sizable portion of the runup that had occurred
in August.

In most manufacturing industries, inventory-to-shipments

ratios in September were at or near the bottom of their recent ranges.
Wholesale inventories rose modestly in the third quarter, and the
stocks-to-sales ratio in September was at the low end of the range
posted over the past year.

At the retail level, inventories rebounded

in September from an August decline, leaving the inventory-to-sales
ratio for the retail sector unchanged from the second quarter.
The nominal U.S. merchandise trade deficit widened sharply
in August; for July and August combined, the deficit was somewhat
larger than its average rate in the second quarter.

The value of

exports was little changed from the second quarter, but the value of
imports increased appreciably.

Most of the increase in imports was in

capital goods, especially computers, and consumer goods.

Recent

indicators suggested that economic activity in the major foreign
industrial countries had remained sluggish in the third quarter.

A

recovery seemed to have gotten under way in Canada, but the economies
of most European countries and Japan evidenced little if any forward
impetus, and the downturn that began in western Germany in the second
quarter appeared to have persisted into the third quarter.
Producer prices of finished goods edged up in October,
reflecing a slight increase in food prices and a further sharp advance
in prices of energy products.

Excluding the finished food and energy

components, producer prices declined slightly, and for the twelvemonth period ended in October, this measure of prices increased
considerably less than it had in the comparable year-earlier period.
At the consumer level, prices of nonfood, non-energy goods and
services advanced more rapidly in October than in other any month
since March.

Over the twelve months ended in October, however, the

rise in this index of consumer prices was considerably smaller than
that recorded in the year-earlier period.

Increases in labor costs,

measured by the total hourly compensation of private industry workers,
slowed further in the third quarter, and both the wage and benefits
components of this index had increased substantially less over the
four quarters that ended in September than in the preceding four
quarters.
At its meeting on October 6, the Committee adopted a directive that called for maintaining the existing degree of pressure on
reserve positions and that included a marked bias toward possible
easing during the intermeeting period.

Accordingly, the directive

indicated that in the context of the Committee's long-run objectives
for price stability and sustainable economic growth, and giving careful consideration to economic, financial, and monetary developments,
slightly greater reserve restraint might be acceptable or slightly
lesser reserve restraint would be acceptable during the intermeeting
period.

The contemplated reserve conditions were expected to be

consistent with growth in M2 and M3 at annual rates of about 2 percent
and 1 percent respectively over the three-month period from September
through December.
Open market operations during the intermeeting period were
directed toward maintaining the existing degree of pressure on reserve
positions.

The emergence of more favorable indications regarding the

performance of the economy and the continued more rapid expansion of
money and credit were seen as obviating the need to implement an
easing in reserve conditions that had been contemplated as a strong
possibility under the directive issued at the October 6 meeting.
Several small technical decreases were made during the intermeeting
period to expected levels of adjustment plus seasonal borrowing to
reflect the usual pattern of diminishing needs for seasonal credit.
Actual borrowing averaged close to expected levels over the three

reserve maintenance periods completed since the October meeting.
Early in the intermeeting period, the federal funds rate exhibited
some of the firmness that had prevailed over most of the previous
period, but subsequently it averaged close to expected levels.
Most other interest rates increased appreciably over the
intermeeting period.

At the beginning of the period, rates generally

incorporated an expected near-term easing of monetary policy.

Subse-

quently, when an easing move was not forthcoming and when concerns
about fiscal stimulus increased amid some signs of firmer economic
activity and increasing money and credit demands, market interest
rates rose for all maturities.

The largest increases were in

intermediate maturities, which were especially affected by expectations of additional federal borrowing and of a stronger economy that
would stimulate rising private credit demands over the next few years.
Expectations of firmer economic growth also boosted stock prices
appreciably over the period.
With interest rates rising in the United States and falling
abroad, the trade-weighted value of the dollar in terms of the other
G-10 currencies rose very substantially over the intermeeting period.
Declines in interest rates in foreign countries were widespread,
reflecting signs of greater economic weakness as well as actual or
prospective easing in monetary policies abroad.

The dollar was

particularly robust against European currencies but advanced only
moderately against the yen.
M2 growth strengthened somewhat in October from its pace in
the two previous months.

The acceleration of M2 growth reflected more

rapid expansion of its transaction components that appeared to be
associated in part with the lagged effect of earlier declines in
market interest rates and opportunity costs and the heavy pace of

mortgage refinancing activity.

M3 grew more slowly in October partly

owing to reduced needs for managed liabilities in conjunction with
somewhat weaker expansion in bank credit.

Through October, both broad

aggregates were estimated to have grown at rates a little below the
lower ends of the ranges established for the year by the Committee.
The staff projection prepared for this meeting suggested a
continuing expansion in economic activity.

Growth was expected to

pick up gradually over 1993 to a rate that, although quite moderate by
past cyclical standards, would be sufficient to reduce the margins of
unemployed labor and captial resources.

The recent backup in long-

term interest rates and the appreciation of the dollar in foreign
exchange markets would exert some restraining influence over the next
several quarters.

Continuing cautiousness on the part of consumers

facing uncertain job and income prospects would tend to hold down
gains in consumption for some period ahead.

But, as further progress

was made in improving household balance sheets and employment growth
gradually resumed, consumer spending would strengthen.

Additional

gains in outlays for business equipment were expected over coming
quarters as firms sought to meet increasing demand for goods and to
respond to competitive pressures by modernizing product lines and
achieving labor-cost savings.

The projection pointed to sluggish

export demand in light of sustained economic weakness abroad.

While

recognizing the possibility of a stimulative fiscal initiative in
1993, the staff retained for this forecast the assumption employed in
several previous forecasts that fiscal policy would remain mildly
restrictive owing in large part to a substantial decline in defense
spending.

The persisting slack in resource utilization over the

forecast horizon was expected to be associated with additional
progress in reducing inflation.

In the Committee's discussion of current and prospective
economic developments, the members indicated that they were encouraged
by the somewhat more positive tone in the latest economic reports and
by the signs of improving business and consumer confidence.

The

expansion appeared to have gathered somewhat more upward momentum than
many had anticipated earlier, though a number of members commented
that relatively slow economic growth was likely to persist over the
nearer term.

The outlook beyond the next quarter or two was subject

to considerable uncertainty and indeed to both upside and downside
risks.

The advent of a new Administration and a new Congress early

next year made fiscal policy especially hard to predict.

Members

observed that indications of some improvement in overall domestic
demands, should they persist, might well generate considerable
strengthening in production activity as businesses attempted to maintain or build up their currently lean inventories.

On the other hand,

the recent appreciation of the dollar and the signs of growing weakness in major foreign economies could have adverse implications for
demands for goods produced in the United States.

On balance, moderate

but sustained growth in overall economic activity was seen as a likely
prospect, though the gains probably would be uneven both in terms of
their timing and the sectors of the economy that would be affected.
Against this background, the members generally continued to view
further progress toward price stability as a reasonable expectation
and an important element in enabling the expansion to be sustained.
In their review of developments in key sectors of the
economy, the members generally agreed that while the evidence of a
strengthening business expansion was still quite limited and much of
it was still anecdotal, there were growing indications of improving
business and consumer confidence.

Some members cautioned that

changing attitudes alone could not be relied on as harbingers of a
more satisfactory economic performance, as experience in recent years
made clear, but the improved financial condition of many business
firms, households, and lending institutions provided a further basis
for optimism.

A good deal of progress already had been made toward

reducing debt burdens, and the retarding effects of balance sheet
adjustments on current spending seemed likely to lessen over the
forecast horizon.

Moreover, despite many lingering problems, the

general health of the banking industry had improved markedly and there
were spreading reports of greater efforts by banks to find creditworthy borrowers.

At the same time, the members saw signs that

demands for bank loans might be picking up a bit from very depressed
levels.
The latest data on retail sales and anecdotal reports from
many parts of the country suggested some improvement in consumer
spending.

There were widespread reports of increasing optimism among

retailers regarding the outlook for sales during the holiday season.
Sales of automobiles and trucks appeared to be rising.

The members

nonetheless generally continued to view the outlook for consumer
spending with considerable caution.

Consumers remained concerned

about job prospects against the background of continuing downsizing
and restructuring activities by many business firms.

Ongoing efforts

to reduce debt burdens also seemed to be exerting a retarding effect
on consumer spending.

Against this background, the upturn in consumer

confidence indicated by a recent survey could prove to be relatively
fragile and short-lived.

On balance, a strengthening trend in

consumer spending, though to a relatively moderate pace by past
business recovery standards, was still expected to provide major
support for a sustained economic expansion.

Since the stimulus from the consumer sector coincided with
relatively lean inventories, its effects might well be reinforced for
a time by business efforts to build their inventories.

Business

spending for equipment also appeared likely to remain fairly robust,
given a moderate expansion in sales and the improving financial
condition of many businesses.

The housing sector was viewed as

another potential, though limited, source of stimulus over the
forecast horizon.

There were reports of improving home sales and home

construction activity in many parts of the country, including some
otherwise depressed areas, and many business contacts also were seeing
better demand for construction materials and home furnishings.

On the

negative side, nonresidential construction remained weak across much
of the nation, and further reductions in construction activity were
likely as major projects were completed.

However, nonresidential

construction was being maintained or even trending higher in a few
areas and appeared to have bottomed out in others.

The rise in

natural gas prices had spurred drilling activity in recent months, but
some members commented that the outlook for significant further gains
in that industry was not promising.
Many of the members stressed that the external sector
constituted a major source of downside risk for the economy.

The

economic prospects for major foreign economies appeared to have
deteriorated recently, and given the appreciation of the dollar, net
exports might well worsen further over the next several quarters.

The

possible failure of ongoing trade negotiations would further dampen
the outlook for U.S. trade.

For the present, anecdotal reports from

around the country on export sales were mixed, with such sales still
well maintained in some industries and areas but slowing in others.

-10-

The outlook for fiscal policy constituted a major source of
uncertainty; while the enactment of some fiscal policy measures now
appeared to be increasingly likely, there was no reliable way to
predict their overall size, specific provisions, or the timing of
their effects.

For now, the downtrend in federal government purchases

of goods and services constituted a sizable negative in the forecast
of aggregate demands.

In particular, the cutbacks in defense

expenditures were having a major effect on local economies in several
parts of the country.

Any new fiscal initiatives might well contain

some stimulative elements designed to provide a boost to a relatively
slow economic expansion.

However, the delays usually encountered in

enacting such legislation together with the subsequent lags before
much of the effects was felt in the economy implied continued fiscal
drag during the quarters immediately ahead; moreover, the propensity
for financial markets to raise interest rates in anticipation of
fiscal policy stimulus might also damp spending for some period.

Some

members saw a risk that much of the fiscal stimulus would be felt at a
time when economic activity might already be gaining considerable
momentum.
Turning to the outlook for inflation, members commented that
despite a disappointing report on consumer prices for October, the
disinflationary trend still appeared to be well established.

In the

view of most members, the outlook for relatively subdued pressures on
resources over the forecast horizon together with the slow growth over
an extended period in broad measures of money augured well for further
progress toward price stability.

Members were continuing to observe

strong competitive pressures in local markets, and business contacts
were still emphasizing the stout resistance that they encountered when
they tried to raise prices to widen profit margins or to pass along

-11-

rising costs.

Most businessmen currently saw and anticipated little

or no inflation in their own industries.
highly price conscious.

Consumers also remained

At the same time, however, there seemed to be

a widespread view in the business community and among consumers that
at some point the rate of inflation was likely to rise appreciably
from its recent level, and such expectations tended to have adverse
repercussions in long-term debt markets and to create tensions in wage
negotiations and other price-setting activities.

Members noted that

current inflationary expectations had been built up over a period of
many years and an extended period of reduced inflation probably would
be required before they disappeared.
At this meeting, the Committee had a preliminary discussion
of the ranges for monetary growth in 1993 that it had established on a
tentative basis at the meeting on June 30-July 1, 1992.

The ranges in

question had been set at 2-1/2 to 6-1/2 percent for M2 and 1 to 5
percent for M3 and were unchanged from those adopted for 1992.

While

there had been considerable sentiment at midyear in favor of lowering
the ranges, a majority of the members had concluded then that uncertainties about the prospective relationship between the monetary
aggregates and nominal spending argued for caution in making any
changes.

The information since midyear had confirmed the persistence

of sizable increases in the velocity of M2 and M3.

A recent staff

study had provided some reasons for this unusual behavior, and staff
analysis pointed to a strong probability that velocity would rise
again next year.
During the discussion, the members generally agreed that
developments since mid-1992 had reinforced the case for some reduction
in the 1993 range for M2, and they indicated that they probably would
support proposals for a lower range.

Such a reduction would be a

-12-

technical adjustment intended to take account of the atypical strength
in velocity.

Some noted that a lower range also would be seen as

underscoring the desire of the Committee to avoid any pickup in
inflation should the expansion gain momentum and indeed as promoting
further progress move toward price stability, thereby establishing a
sounder basis for sustained growth in the economy at its highest
potential.

The ranges would be voted on in February prior to their

scheduled announcement to Congress, and by that time more information
would be available to gauge the prospective behavior of M2 during
1993.

In the Committee's discussion of policy for the intermeeting
period ahead, a majority of the members indicated a preference for
maintaining unchanged conditions in reserve markets, but several
others believed that some easing would be a more appropriate policy.
Members who supported a steady policy course emphasized the growing if
still tentative indications of a strengthening economy--including the
pickup in money and credit growth--and the apparent upturn in business
and consumer confidence.

Some also cited the increased prospects of

fiscal policy measures that were likely to provide some net stimulus
to the economy over the intermediate term.

Members who preferred to

ease monetary policy at this time referred to what they viewed as an
unsatisfactory outlook for economic activity, and some stressed the
desirability of taking prompt action to promote sustained growth in
the broader monetary aggregates within the Committee's ranges.
Members who favored an immediate easing also endorsed coupling such a
policy move with a reduction at this time in the tentative M2 range
for 1993 in order to emphasize the Committee's commitment to
noninflationary economic growth.

-13-

In the course of the discussion, the members took account of
a staff analysis that suggested some moderation in the growth of M2
over the remainder of the year, assuming unchanged conditions in
reserve markets.

While M2 growth on a quarterly average basis was

expected to be stronger in the current quarter than in the previous
two quarters, expansion for the year as a whole was still projected to
fall a little below the Committee's annual range.

Some members

commented that an important policy objective would be to prevent M2
growth from faltering--such a development might parallel a similar
pause in the economy--as it had earlier in the current expansion.

On

the other hand, some members noted the persisting increases in M2
velocity.

They remarked that the level of short-term interest rates

together with the very rapid expansion in Ml and reserves pointed to
an adequate availability of liquidity in the economy and thus
suggested that current monetary policy already was appropriately
stimulative and properly positioned to support the projected
strengthening in economic activity.

Indeed, in one view continued

rapid expansion in the narrrow measures of money and reserves, if
allowed to continue, would be a matter of increasing concern with
respect to the longer-run implications for inflation.
In the Committee's discussion of possible adjustments to
policy during the intermeeting period, many of the members expressed a
preference for a directive that did not bias potential adjustments in
either direction.

In this view, the expansion was on a reasonably

solid footing, the risks to the expansion were now fairly evenly
balanced, and a steady policy course should be maintained in the
absence of unanticipated developments with significant implications
for the economic outlook.

Other members, while encouraged by recent

economic developments, wanted to bias the directive toward ease,

-14-

though without the strong presumption of some potential easing
that had been associated with the previous directive.

They observed

that the economy was still expanding at a relatively subdued pace,
inflation was on a downward track, and given the earlier tendency for
the recovery to weaken, they believed that the Committee should react
relatively promptly to indications, including any downturn in money
growth, that the economy might again be falling short of a moderate
growth path.

Most of the members who preferred to ease immediately

indicated that they could accept an unchanged directive that was
biased towards ease, and such a directive also was acceptable to many
members who favored a symmetrical directive.
At the conclusion of the Committee's discussion, all but
three of the members indicated their acceptance of a directive that
called for maintaining the existing degree of pressure on reserve
positions and that would include some bias toward possible easing
during the intermeeting period.

Two of the members expressed a strong

preference for a symmetric directive with regard to possible intermeeting policy adjustments, while another was firmly persuaded of the
desirability of an immediate increase in reserve availability to
strengthen the growth of M2.

Accordingly, in the context of the

Committee's long-run objectives for price stability and sustainable
economic growth, and giving careful consideration to economic,
financial, and monetary developments, the Committee decided that
slightly greater monetary restraint might be acceptable or slightly
lesser monetary restraint would be acceptable during the intermeeting
period.

The reserve conditions contemplated at this meeting were

expected to be consistent with growth in M2 and M3 at annual rates of
about 3-1/2 and 1 percent respectively over the three-month period
from September through December.

-15-

At the conclusion of the meeting, the following domestic
policy directive was issued to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York:
The information reviewed at this meeting suggests
that economic activity has been expanding at a moderate
pace. Total nonfarm payroll employment was up slightly
in October after declining in the previous two months,
and the civilian unemployment rate edged down to 7.4
percent. Industrial production rose somewhat in
October. Retail sales increased considerably in
September and October. There was some strengthening
in residential construction activity over the summer
months. Outlays for business equipment have continued
to increase, and recent data on orders for nondefense
capital goods point to further growth in the near term;
expenditures for nonresidential construction have
remained weak. The nominal U.S. merchandise trade
deficit widened somewhat in July-August from its
average rate in the second quarter. Recent data on
wages and prices have been mixed but suggest on balance
a continuing trend toward lower inflation.
Most interest rates have increased appreciably
since the Committee meeting on October 6. In foreign
exchange markets, the trade-weighted value of the
dollar in terms of the other G-10 currencies rose very
substantially over the intermeeting period.
M2 has expanded at a moderate pace since midsummer, with all of its growth stemming from its Ml
component, while M3 grew slowly. Through October, both
aggregates were estimated to have grown at rates a
little below the lower ends of the ranges established
by the Committee for the year.
The Federal Open Market Committee seeks monetary
and financial conditions that will foster price stability and promote sustainable growth in output. In
furtherance of these objectives, the Committee at its
meeting on June 30-July 1 reaffirmed the ranges it had
established in February for growth of M2 and M3 of
2-1/2 to 6-1/2 percent and 1 to 5 percent respectively,
measured from the fourth quarter of 1991 to the fourth
quarter of 1992. The Committee anticipated that
developments contributing to unusual velocity increases
could persist in the second half of the year. The
monitoring range for growth of total domestic nonfinancial debt also was maintained at 4-1/2 to 8-1/2
percent for the year. For 1993, the Committee on a
tentative basis set the same ranges as in 1992 for
growth of the monetary aggregates and debt, measured

from the fourth quarter of 1992 to the fourth quarter
of 1993.

The behavior of the monetary aggregates will

continue to be evaluated in the light of progress
toward price level stability, movements in their
velocities, and developments in the economy and
financial markets.

-16In the implementation of policy for the immediate
future, the Committee seeks to maintain the existing
degree of pressure on reserve positions. In the
context of the Committee's long-run objectives for
price stability and sustainable economic growth, and
giving careful consideration to economic, financial,
and monetary developments, slightly greater reserve
restraint might or slightly lesser reserve restraint
would be acceptable in the intermeeting period. The
contemplated reserve conditions are expected to be
consistent with growth of M2 and M3 over the period
from September through December at annual rates of
about 3-1/2 and 1 percent, respectively.
Votes for this action: Messrs. Greenspan,
Corrigan, Angell, Hoenig, Kelley, Lindsey,
Mullins, Ms. Phillips, and Mr. Syron.
Votes against this action: Messrs. Jordan,
LaWare, and Melzer.
Mr. Jordan dissented because he preferred taking immediate
action to increase the availability of bank reserves sufficiently to
raise M2 growth to a pace more consistent with the Committee's annual
range.

Because desirable M2 expansion in line with the Committee's

objectives would be likely to fall within a lower range next year, he
would announce concurrently a reduction in the 1993 range to make clear
that near-term action to increase M2 expansion was not an abandonment of
the long-term objective of non-inflationary monetary growth.
Messrs. LaWare and Melzer dissented because they did not want
to bias the directive toward possible easing during the intermeeting
period.

In their view, recent developments pointed to a strengthening

economy, and they favored a steady policy that was not predisposed to
react to near-term weakness in economic or monetary data.

More time was

needed to evaluate the effects of prior monetary policy actions, and
they were concerned that the adoption of a more stimulative policy over
the near term might well-establish a basis for greater inflation later.
Mr. Melzer was concerned that rapid growth in total bank reserves, the
monetary base, and M1 over the last two years might already have laid a
foundation for accelerating nominal GDP growth and a reversal of the

-17disinflationary trend.

In addition, he noted that policy errors can

easily be made at this stage of the business cycle.

In an economic

expansion, efforts to resist increases in the federal funds rate through
large reserve injections eventually lead to higher inflation and higher
nominal interest rates.
2.

Authorization for Domestic Open Market Operations
The Committee approved a temporary increase of $3 billion,

to a level of $11 billion, in the limit on changes between Committee
meetings in System Account holdings of U.S. government and federal
agency securities.

The increase amended paragraph l(a) of the

Authorization for Domestic Open Market Operations and was effective
for the intermeeting period ending with the close of business on
December 22, 1992.
Votes for this action: Messrs. Greenspan, Corrigan,
Angell, Hoenig, Jordan, Kelley, LaWare, Lindsey, Melzer,
Mullins, Ms. Phillips, and Mr. Syron.
Votes against this action: None.
The Manager of the System Open Market Account advised the
Committee that the current leeway of $8 billion for changes in System
Account holdings might not be sufficient to accommodate the potentially large need to add reserves over the intermeeting period ahead
to meet an anticipated seasonal bulge in the demand for currency and
required reserves.