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MonetaryTrends
December 2003

When making monetary policy decisions, the Federal
Reserve looks to financial markets for information about
the state of the economy and their expectations of monetary
policy actions. For instance, the difference in yields between
nominal and inflation-indexed Treasury securities—the
TIPS spread—tells the Federal Reserve about the average
rate of CPI-U inflation the markets expect for the time to
maturity of these securities. (CPI-U is the consumer price
index for all urban consumers.) Similarly, the federal funds
futures market offers the Federal Reserve a reading of the
markets’ expectations about the path of the federal funds
rate over the next few months. Clearly, through communication, the Federal Reserve tries to offer the markets some
guidance about its intentions. Yet, decisions on monetary
policy actions are not finalized before the Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) actually meets. It is thus
almost inevitable that, on occasion, the Federal Reserve
will surprise the markets.
It is interesting to know how the TIPS spread—the
markets’ gauge of the expected rate of inflation—responds
to surprises in monetary policy actions and whether these
responses are sensible in magnitude. The chart plots, for
the period January 1999 through September 2003, surprises
in monetary policy actions against changes in the TIPS
spread. Surprises in monetary policy actions—that is, in
the federal funds rate target—are measured by the price
change of near-expiration federal funds futures contracts
on days of scheduled FOMC meetings and on days of
unscheduled, intermeeting monetary policy actions. The
regression line in the chart, which was generated using a
technique that is robust to outliers, is downward sloping.
This suggests that monetary policy actions influence market participants as follows: tighter-(easier)-than-expected
actions lead market participants to expect a lower (higher)
average rate of inflation over the next 10 years, as reflected
in the TIPS spread. (The author confirmed the statistical
significance of this finding in a more comprehensive regression approach and for alternative measures of the TIPS
spread.)

Are changes in inflation expectations after monetary
policy surprises of similar size as actual changes in the
rate of inflation? To answer this question we compare
updates of the rate of expected inflation with updates of
the actual rate of inflation. For every month during the
period January 1999 through September 2003, we measure
the logarithmic change in the average rate of inflation over
the previous 10 years and the logarithmic change in the
constant-maturity 10-year TIPS spread. Changes in the
TIPS spread—and thus measured inflation expectations—
are well aligned with actual changes in the rate of inflation
when updates of the markets’ forecast of the future average
rate of inflation and updates of the past average rate of
inflation are of similar size. In fact, we find that the sum
of the absolute values of logarithmic changes of the
expected rate of inflation is 7.4 times the sum of actual
logarithmic changes in the 10-year average rate of inflation.
It seems then that inflation expectations, at least as judged
by the yield spread between nominal and inflation-indexed
Treasury securities, tend to overshoot.
—Frank A. Schmid

Change in Expected Rate of Inflation (Percentage Points)

Does the TIPS Spread
Overshoot?

0.05

0.00

–0.05

–0.10

–0.4

–0.3

–0.2

–0.1

0.0

0.1

Surprise Monetary Policy Action (Percentage Points)

NOTE: The surprise component of the FOMC decision on the
federal funds target rate is measured by the price change in
the respective month’s federal funds futures contract, adjusted
for the number of calendar days remaining for the month. If
the FOMC policy action happened within the last seven days
of the month, the price change of next month’s federal funds
futures contract was used.

Views expressed do not necessarily reflect official positions of the Federal Reserve System.

Available on the web at research.stlouisfed.org

Contents
Page
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
14
15
16
18

Monetary and Financial Indicators at a Glance
Monetary Aggregates and Their Components
Monetary Aggregates: Monthly Growth
Reserves Markets and Short-Term Credit Flows
Measures of Expected Inflation
Interest Rates
Policy-Based Inflation Indicators
Implied Forward Rates, Futures Contracts, and Inflation-Indexed Securities
Velocity, Gross Domestic Product, and M2
Bank Credit
Stock Market Index and Foreign Inflation and Interest Rates
Reference Tables
Definitions, Notes, and Sources

Conventions used in this publication:
1. Unless otherwise indicated, data are monthly.
2. Shaded areas indicate recessions, as determined by the National Bureau of Economic Research.
3. Percent change at an annual rate is the simple, not compounded, monthly percent change multiplied by 12. For
example, using consecutive months, the percent change at an annual rate in x between month t –1 and the current
month t is: [(xt /x t – 1 )–1] × 1200. Note that this differs from National Economic Trends. In that publication, monthly
percent changes are compounded and expressed as annual growth rates.
4. The percent change from year ago refers to the percent change from the same period in the previous year. For example,
the percent change from year ago in x between month t –12 and the current month t is: [(xt /x t – 12 )–1] × 100.
We welcome your comments addressed to:
Editor, Monetary Trends
Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
P.O. Box 442
St. Louis, MO 63166-0442
Beginning this issue, 10-year and 30-year inflation-indexed
government bond yields for France are included on page 11.

or to:
stlsFRED@stls.frb.org

Monetary Trends is published monthly by the Research Division of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Single-copy subscriptions are available free of charge by writing to the Public
Affairs Department, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, P.O. Box 442, St. Louis, MO 63166-0442 or by calling (314) 444-8809. Subscription forms may also be completed online at
research.stlouisfed.org/order/pubform.php. For more information on data in this publication, please visit research.stlouisfed.org/fred2 or call (314) 444-8590. The entire publication is also
available on the Internet at research.stlouisfed.org/publications/mt.

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends
Reserve Market Rates

M2 and MZM
Billions of dollars

Percent

6650

7.00

Effective Federal Funds Rate
Intended Federal Funds Rate

6.50

6400

6.00
6150

5.50

5900

5.00
4.50

5650

M2

4.00

5400

3.50

5150

3.00

4900

2.50

Primary Credit Rate
Discount Rate

2.00

4650

1.50

MZM

4400

1.00

4150

0.50
2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

Adjusted Monetary Base

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

Treasury Yield Curve

Percent change at an annual rate

Percent

50

6.0

40

5.5
5.0

30

Week Ending:
11/15/02
10/17/03
11/14/03

4.5
20

4.0

10

3.5

0

3.0
2.5

-10

2.0
-20

1.5

-30

1.0

-40

0.5
2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

3m

1y

2y

3y

5y

7y

10y

2004

Total Bank Credit

Interest Rates
Aug 03

Sep 03

Oct 03

Federal Funds Rate

1.03

1.01

1.01

Prime Rate

4.00

4.00

4.00

Primary Credit Rate

2.00

2.00

2.00

Conventional Mortgage Rate

6.26

6.15

Percent change at an annual rate
50

40

30

.
Treasury
Yields
Treasury
Yields:

20

10

0

.

.

5.95
.

.

.

3-Month Constant Maturity

0.97

0.96

0.94

6-Month Constant Maturity

1.05

1.03

1.02

1-Year Constant Maturity

1.31

1.24

1.25

3-Year Constant Maturity

2.44

2.23

2.26

5-Year Constant Maturity

3.37

3.18

3.19

10-Year Constant Maturity

4.45

4.27

4.29

-10
2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

3

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends
MZM and M1
Percent change from year ago
25
20
15
10

MZM

5
0

M1

-5
-10
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

M2
Percent change from year ago
15

10

5

0

-5
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

M3
Percent change from year ago
15

10

5

0

-5
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

Monetary Services Index - M2
Percent change from year ago
15

10

5

0

-5
86
1986

87
1987

88
1988

89
1989

90
1990

91
1991

92
1992

93
1993

94
1994

95
1995

96
1996

97
1997

98
1998

99
1999

00
2000

01
2001

02
2002

03
2003

2004

Research Division

4

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends

Adjusted Monetary Base
Percent change from year ago
20
15
10
5
0
-5
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

98

1998

1999

99

00

2000

2001

01

2002

02

2003

Domestic Nonfinancial Debt

Currency Held by the Nonbank Public

Percent change from year ago

Percent change from year ago

03

2004

15

15
10

Total

10

5
0
5

Federal

-5
-10

0
1996

1996

1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

Time Deposits

Checkable and Savings Deposits

Percent change from year ago

Percent change from year ago

30

2003

2004

30

25

25

Large Denomination

20

20

15

15

10

10

5

5

0

0

-5

-5

Small Denomination

-10

Savings

-10

-15

Checkable

-15
2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

2000

Note: The surge in large time deposits for the month of July 2003,
was due to accounting changes for commercial banks. For further
information, please refer to www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h8/.

Money Market Mutual Fund Shares

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

Billions of dollars

60
50

Institutional Funds

30
20

Billions of dollars
400

500

350
300

Repos (left)

400

10

250

350

Retail Funds

200

Eurodollars (right)

300

-10
-20

150

250
2000
2000

2001
2001

2002
2002

2003
2003

2004

550

450

0

2003

Repurchase Agreements and Eurodollars

Percent change from year ago

40

2003

100
2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

5

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends
M1
Percent change at an annual rate
80
60
40
20
0
-20
-40
-60
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

MZM
Percent change at an annual rate
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

M2
Percent change at an annual rate
40
30
20
10
0
-10
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

M3
Percent change at an annual rate
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
86
1986

87
1987

88
1988

89
1989

90
1990

91
1991

92
1992

93
1993

94
1994

95
1995

96
1996

97
1997

98
1998

99
1999

00
2000

01
2001

02
2002

03
2003

2004

Research Division

6

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends

Adjusted and Required Reserves
Billions of dollars
120
100

Adjusted
80
60

Required

40
20
0
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

Total Borrowings, nsa

Excess Reserves plus RCB Contracts

Billions of dollars

Billions of dollars

3.5

28

3.0

24

2.5

03

2004

20

2.0
16
1.5
12

1.0

8

0.5
0.0

4
1996

1996

1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004

1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004

Nonfinancial Commercial Paper
Percent change from year ago
60
40
20
0
-20
-40
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

Consumer Credit
Percent change from year ago
20
15
10
5
0
-5
-10
86
1986

87
1987

88
1988

89
1989

90
1990

91
1991

92
1992

93
1993

94
1994

95
1995

96
1996

97
1997

98
1998

99
1999

00
2000

01
2001

02
2002

03
2003

2004

Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

7

updated through
11/18/03

Monetary Trends
Inflation and Inflation Expectations
Percent
10

8

6

Federal Reserve Bank
of Philadelphia
Humphrey-Hawkins CPI Inflation Range
4

University of
Michigan

2

CPI Inflation

0
86

87

88

89

90

91

92

93

94

95

96

97

98

99

00

01

02

03

04

The shaded region shows the Humphrey-Hawkins CPI inflation range. Beginning in January 2000, the Humphrey-Hawkins inflation range was reported
using the PCE price index and therefore is not shown on this graph. See notes on page 19.

Treasury Security Yield Spreads
Yield to maturity
6

10-Year less 3-Month T-Bill
4
2
0

10-Year less 3-Year T-Bill

3-Year less 3-Month T-Bill

-2
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

Real Interest Rates
Percent, Real rate = Nominal rate less CPI inflation
8
6

1-Year Treasury Yield

4
2

Federal Funds Rate
0
-2
86
1986

87
1987

88
1988

89
1989

90
1990

91
1991

92
1992

93
1993

94
1994

95
1995

96
1996

97
1997

98
1998

99
1999

00
2000

01
2001

02
2002

03
2003

2004

Research Division

8

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

updated through
11/04/03

Monetary Trends

Short-Term Interest Rates
Percent
14

90-Day Commercial Paper

12
10
8

Prime Rate

6
4

3-Month Treasury Yield

2
0
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

02

2002

2003

03

2004

Long-Term Interest Rates
Percent
13

Conventional Mortgage
11
9
7

Corporate Aaa

5

10-Year Treasury Yield
3
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

Long-Term Interest Rates

Short-Term Interest Rates

Percent

Percent

9

2001

01

02

2002

2003

03

2004

9
8

8

90-Day Commercial Paper

7

Corporate Baa

7

6
5

6

3-Month
Treasury Yield

4

5

3

10-Year Treasury Yield

2

4

1

3

0
2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

FOMC Intended Federal Funds Rate, Discount Rate, and Primary Credit Rate
Percent
12
10

Intended Federal
Funds Rate

8
6

Discount Rate

Primary Credit
Rate

4
2
0
86
1986

87
1987

88
1988

89
1989

90
1990

91
1991

92
1992

93
1993

94
1994

95
1995

96
1996

97
1997

98
1998

99
1999

00
2000

01
2001

02
2002

03
2003

2004

Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

9

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends
Federal Funds Rate and Inflation Targets
Percent
12

4% 3% 2% 1% 0% Target Inflation Rates

9

Actual

6

3

0
1994

1994

1995

1995

1996

1996

1997

1997

1998

1998

Calculated federal funds rate is based on Taylor’s rule. See notes on page 19.

1999

1999

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

Components of Taylor’s Rule
Actual and Potential Real GDP
PCE Inflation and Projections
Percent change from year ago

Billions of chain-weighted 1996 dollars
10000

6

9500

5

Actual

9000

4

8500

3

Potential

8000

2

7500

1

7000

0
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

The shaded region shows the range of projections published in the
Monetary Policy Report to the Congress.

Monetary Base Growth* and Inflation Targets
Percent
12

Actual

9

6

3

Target Inflation Rates 0% 1% 2% 3% 4%

0
1994

94

95

1995

1996

96

97

1997

98

1998

99

1999

00

2000

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

*Modified for the effects of sweeps programs on reserve demand.
Calculated base growth is based on McCallum’s rule. Actual base growth is percent change from year ago. See notes on page 19.

04

Components of McCallum’s Rule
Monetary Base Velocity Growth
Real Output Growth
Percent

Percent
8

8

1-Year
Moving Average

1-Year
Moving Average

4

4

10-Year
Moving Average

0
0

4-Year
Moving Average

-4

-8

-4
1994
94

1995
95

1996
96

1997
97

1998
98

1999
99

2000
00

2001
01

2002
02

2003
03

1994
04

94

1995
95

1996
96

1997
97

1998
98

1999
99

2000
00

2001
01

2002
02

2003
03

04

Research Division

10

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

updated through
11/18/03

Monetary Trends

Implied One-Year Forward Rates

Rates on 3-Month Eurodollar Futures
Percent, daily data

Percent
8
6

1.4

Week Ending:
11/15/02
10/17/03
11/14/03

1.3

Dec 2003

Jan 2004

4

||
||
||

1.2

2

Nov 2003
0

2y

3y

5y

7y

10y

1.1

09/15

Rates on Selected
Federal Funds Futures Contracts
Percent, daily data

Percent
1.2

Dec 2003

10/06

10/13

10/20

10/27

11/03

11/10

11/17

1.1

||
||
||
|

1

09/29

Rates on Federal Funds Futures
on Selected Dates

1.1

Nov 2003

09/22

10/17/2003

Jan 2004

11/14/2003

1.0

09/12/2003
0.9

0.9

09/15

09/22

09/29

10/06

10/13

10/20

10/27

11/03

11/10

11/17

Dec

Nov

Jan

Feb

Apr

Mar

Contract Month

Inflation-Indexed Treasury Bonds

Inflation-Indexed Treasury Yield Spreads

Percent, weekly data

Percent, weekly data
4

5
4.5

3

4

30-Year

3.5

2

30-Year

3

10-Year

2.5

10-Year
1

2

0

1.5
1999

1999

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

1999

1999

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

Inflation-Indexed 30-Year Government Bonds

Inflation-Indexed 10-Year Government Bonds

Percent, weekly data

Percent, weekly data

5

5

U.S.

U.S.

4

France
Canada

||
|

3

2

4

France
3

2

U.K.
1
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
01/01/1999
01/01/2000
01/01/2001
01/01/2002
01/01/2003 01/01/2004

U.K.
1
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
01/01/1999
01/01/2000
01/01/2001
01/01/2002
01/01/2003 01/01/2004

Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

11

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends
Velocity
Nominal GDP/MZM, Nominal GDP/M2 (Ratio Scale)
3.00
2.75

MZM

2.50

2.25

M2
2.00

1.75

1.50
9497

86

9862

87

10227

88

10593

89

10958

90

11323

91

11688

92

12054

93

12419

94

12784

95

13149

96

13515

97

13880

98

14245

99

14610

00

14976

01

15341

02

15706

03

16071

Interest Rates
Percent
10

8

3-Month T-Bill
6

4

M2 Own
MZM Own

2

0

86

9862

87

10227

88

10593

89

10958

90

11323

91

11688

92

12054

93

12419

94

12784

95

13149

96

13515

97

13880

98

14245

99

14610

00

14976

01

15341

02

15706

MZM Velocity and Interest Rate Spread

M2 Velocity and Interest Rate Spread

Ratio Scale

Ratio Scale

3.50

03

16071

2.25

Velocity = Nominal GDP / M2

Velocity = Nominal GDP / MZM

9497

3.00

2.50

2.00

2.00

1.75

1.50

1974Q1 to 1993Q4
1994Q1 to present

1974Q1 to 1993Q4
1994Q1 to present
1.25

1.50

0

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Interest Rate Spread = 3-Month T-Bill less MZM Own Rate

0.0

0.5

1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0
Interest Rate Spread = 3-Month T-Bill less M2 Own Rate

Research Division

12

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends

Gross Domestic Product
Percent change from year ago
20

15

10

5

0
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

Dashed lines indicate 10-year moving averages.

Real Gross Domestic Product
Percent change from year ago
15

10

5

0

-5
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

Dashed lines indicate 10-year moving averages.

Gross Domestic Product Price Index
Percent change from year ago
20

15

10

5

0
1986

86

1987

87

1988

88

1989

89

1990

90

1991

91

1992

92

1993

93

1994

94

1995

95

1996

96

1997

97

1998

98

1999

99

2000

00

2001

01

2002

02

2003

03

2004

Dashed lines indicate 10-year moving averages.

M2
Percent change from year ago
20

15

10

5

0
86
1986

87
1987

88
1988

89
1989

90
1990

91
1991

92
1992

93
1993

94
1994

95
1995

96
1996

97
1997

98
1998

99
1999

00
2000

01
2001

02
2002

03
2003

2004

Dashed lines indicate 10-year moving averages.

Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

13

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends
Bank Credit
Percent change from year ago
20

15

10

5

0
1994

1994

1995

1995

1996

1996

1997

1997

1998

1998

1999

1999

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

Investment Securities in Bank Credit at Commercial Banks
Percent change from year ago
25
20
15
10
5
0
-5
1994

1994

1995

1995

1996

1996

1997

1997

1998

1998

1999

1999

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

Total Loans and Leases in Bank Credit at Commercial Banks
Percent change from year ago
20
15
10
5
0
-5
1994

1994

1995

1995

1996

1996

1997

1997

1998

1998

1999

1999

2000

2000

2001

2001

2002

2002

2003

2003

2004

Commercial and Industrial Loans at Commercial Banks
Percent change from year ago
20
15
10
5
0
-5
-10
1994
1994

1995
1995

1996
1996

1997
1997

1998
1998

1999
1999

2000
2000

2001
2001

2002
2002

2003
2003

2004

Research Division

14

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

updated through
11/04/03

Monetary Trends

Standard & Poor’s 500
1600

48

1400

42

1200

36

1000

30

Price/Earnings Ratio
(right)

800

24

600

18

400

12

Composite Index
(left)

200

6

0

0

86

87

88

89

90

91

92

93

94

95

96

97

98

99

00

01

02

03

Recent Inflation and Long-Term Interest Rates
Consumer Price
Inflation Rates

Long-Term
Government Bond Rates

Percent change from year ago
2002Q4
2003Q1
2003Q2
2003Q3

Percent
Jul03

Aug03

Sep03

Oct03

United States

2.25

2.87

2.17

2.22

3.98

4.45

4.27

4.29

Canada

3.79

4.47

2.81

.

4.78

4.96

4.64

.

France

2.14

2.38

1.92

.

4.10

4.32

.

.

Germany

1.20

1.17

0.87

.

3.97

4.13

.

.

Italy

2.77

2.72

2.70

2.75

4.29

4.31

.

.

-0.40

-0.23

-0.24

.

0.92

1.14

1.45

1.40

2.56

3.07

3.01

.

4.40

4.58

4.68

.

Japan
United Kingdom

Inflation and Long-Term Interest Rate Differentials
Percent

Percent
3

3

Canada
U.K.

Canada
0

0

U.K.
Japan

Germany
Germany
-3

-3

Inflation differential = Foreign inflation less U.S. inflation
Long-term rate differential = Foreign rate less U.S. rate
-6

Japan
-6

14610

2000

14976

2001

15341

2002

15706

2003

16071

14610

2000

14976

2001

15341

2002

15706

2003

16071

Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

15

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends
Money Stock

Bank

Adjusted

M1

MZM

M2

M3

Credit

Monetary Base Reserves

MSI M2

1998.

1079.870

3709.650

4207.963

5749.858

4323.060

525.184

84.060

241.559

1999.

1101.495

4170.202

4525.937

6252.564

4575.872

574.181

88.664

257.905

2000.

1103.401

4507.769

4801.347

6841.181

5024.634

607.106

84.511

272.528

2001.

1136.611

5219.013

5221.918

7621.029

5342.672

641.167

85.931

296.260

2002.

1190.219

5886.055

5619.340

8229.864

5591.762

697.071

87.924

319.376

2001

1

1100.135

4855.491

5032.889

7275.980

5269.357

619.676

82.207

285.335

.

2

1116.115

5107.306

5160.151

7543.074

5310.771

629.484

82.722

292.821

.

3

1162.814

5327.181

5291.578

7725.858

5360.470

651.930

90.906

300.511

.

4

1167.377

5586.073

5403.055

7939.203

5430.091

663.578

87.887

306.373

2002

1

1183.762

5723.809

5494.301

8054.798

5408.607

680.264

88.157

311.581

.

2

1181.589

5809.724

5546.132

8137.171

5478.965

692.937

86.979

315.236

.

3

1190.469

5944.730

5668.793

8282.900

5652.919

702.753

86.820

322.269

.

4

1205.056

6065.955

5768.133

8444.589

5826.557

712.330

89.741

328.417

2003

1

1227.800

6158.533

5859.847

8562.316

5945.490

726.820

90.930

334.329

.

2

1255.955

6259.221

5984.808

8699.226

6115.741

738.230

91.800

341.932

.

3

1283.878

6460.387

6119.163

8915.350

6186.935

744.031

94.535

349.883

2001

Oct

1163.909

5511.453

5362.163

7869.673

5413.005

663.798

91.551

304.237

.

Nov

1165.335

5585.259

5402.576

7943.600

5445.128

661.381

86.229

306.400

.

Dec

1172.887

5661.508

5444.426

8004.336

5432.139

665.556

85.880

308.483

2002

Jan

1179.038

5682.466

5468.464

8015.988

5406.026

673.713

87.296

310.002

.

Feb

1185.171

5736.941

5506.767

8067.665

5413.644

681.914

89.238

312.211

.

Mar

1187.077

5752.020

5507.673

8080.741

5406.150

685.165

87.936

312.531

.

Apr

1172.605

5750.150

5494.321

8082.845

5431.428

689.008

88.352

312.452

.

May

1183.278

5818.160

5556.930

8150.116

5480.304

692.736

86.588

315.710

.

Jun

1188.883

5860.862

5587.144

8178.551

5525.163

697.068

85.998

317.546

.

Jul

1195.728

5908.530

5635.021

8224.726

5578.078

701.032

86.100

320.046

.

Aug

1184.451

5950.530

5672.873

8291.246

5660.325

702.878

86.382

322.454

.

Sep

1191.228

5975.129

5698.486

8332.727

5720.354

704.350

87.978

324.306

.

Oct

1202.609

5977.579

5736.382

8344.143

5755.413

710.664

89.827

326.548

.

Nov

1202.180

6087.291

5776.373

8467.070

5834.020

712.472

89.818

328.846

.

Dec

1210.378

6132.996

5791.643

8522.553

5890.239

713.853

89.579

329.856

2003

Jan

1212.991

6130.904

5820.466

8522.414

5884.084

719.528

89.511

331.939

.

Feb

1233.421

6170.179

5873.415

8568.984

5961.001

728.657

91.909

335.086

.

Mar

1236.989

6174.517

5885.659

8595.550

5991.385

732.276

91.371

335.963

.

Apr

1237.371

6182.109

5909.264

8614.188

6025.831

736.488

92.367

337.809

.

May

1258.304

6259.687

5998.222

8708.079

6133.060

738.668

91.471

342.511

.

Jun

1272.189

6335.868

6046.939

8775.410

6188.332

739.535

91.562

345.475

.

Jul

1277.993

6439.198

6097.780

8905.594

6192.845

741.244

93.479

348.640

.

Aug

1285.743

6474.566

6140.721

8930.762

6180.426

745.293

95.372

351.061

.

Sep

1287.897

6467.397

6118.987

8909.693

6187.533

745.557

94.755

349.949

.

Oct

1286.751

6413.424

6089.157

8835.401

6171.244

753.731

95.033

349.167

*All values are given in billions of dollars.
Research Division

16

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends

Federal

Discount

Primary

Prime

3-mo

Funds

Rate

Credit Rate

Rate

CDs

Treasury Yields
3-mo

3-yr

Corporate

10-yr

Aaa Bonds

S&L
Aaa Bonds

Conventional
Mortgage

1998.

5.35

4.92

.

8.35

5.47

4.91

5.14

5.26

6.53

4.93

6.94

1999.

4.97

4.62

.

7.99

5.33

4.78

5.49

5.64

7.04

5.28

7.43

2000.

6.24

5.73

.

9.23

6.46

6.00

6.22

6.03

7.62

5.58

8.06

2001.

3.89

3.41

.

6.92

3.69

3.47

4.08

5.02

7.08

5.01

6.97

2002.

1.67

1.17

.

4.68

1.73

1.63

3.10

4.61

6.49

4.87

6.54

2001

1

5.59

5.11

.

8.62

5.26

4.95

4.64

5.05

7.08

5.03

7.01

.

2

4.33

3.83

.

7.34

4.10

3.75

4.43

5.27

7.22

5.11

7.13

.

3

3.50

3.06

.

6.57

3.34

3.24

3.93

4.98

7.11

4.95

6.97

.

4

2.13

1.64

.

5.16

2.06

1.94

3.33

4.77

6.92

4.97

6.78

2002

1

1.73

1.25

.

4.75

1.82

1.76

3.75

5.08

6.62

5.02

6.97

.

2

1.75

1.25

.

4.75

1.83

1.75

3.77

5.10

6.71

5.01

6.81

.

3

1.74

1.25

.

4.75

1.76

1.67

2.62

4.26

6.35

4.72

6.29

.

4

1.44

0.94

.

4.45

1.49

1.36

2.27

4.01

6.28

4.71

6.08

2003

1

1.25

.

2.25

4.25

1.26

1.18

2.07

3.92

6.00

4.60

5.83

.

2

1.25

.

2.23

4.24

1.17

1.06

1.77

3.62

5.31

4.28

5.51

.

3

1.02

.

2.00

4.00

1.07

0.95

2.20

4.23

5.70

4.68

6.01

2001

Oct

2.49

2.02

.

5.53

2.31

2.20

3.14

4.57

7.03

4.89

6.62

.

Nov

2.09

1.58

.

5.10

2.03

1.91

3.22

4.65

6.97

4.85

6.66

.

Dec

1.82

1.33

.

4.84

1.83

1.72

3.62

5.09

6.77

5.18

7.07

2002

Jan

1.73

1.25

.

4.75

1.74

1.68

3.56

5.04

6.55

5.05

7.00

.

Feb

1.74

1.25

.

4.75

1.82

1.76

3.55

4.91

6.51

4.93

6.89

.

Mar

1.73

1.25

.

4.75

1.91

1.83

4.14

5.28

6.81

5.09

7.01
6.99

.

Apr

1.75

1.25

.

4.75

1.87

1.75

4.01

5.21

6.76

5.09

.

May

1.75

1.25

.

4.75

1.82

1.76

3.80

5.16

6.75

5.03

6.81

.

Jun

1.75

1.25

.

4.75

1.81

1.73

3.49

4.93

6.63

4.92

6.65

.

Jul

1.73

1.25

.

4.75

1.79

1.71

3.01

4.65

6.53

4.81

6.49

.

Aug

1.74

1.25

.

4.75

1.73

1.65

2.52

4.26

6.37

4.78

6.29

.

Sep

1.75

1.25

.

4.75

1.76

1.66

2.32

3.87

6.15

4.58

6.09

.

Oct

1.75

1.25

.

4.75

1.73

1.61

2.25

3.94

6.32

4.66

6.11

.

Nov

1.34

0.83

.

4.35

1.39

1.25

2.32

4.05

6.31

4.77

6.07

.

Dec

1.24

0.75

.

4.25

1.34

1.21

2.23

4.03

6.21

4.70

6.05

2003

Jan

1.24

.

.

4.25

1.29

1.19

2.18

4.05

6.17

4.72

5.92

.

Feb

1.26

.

2.25

4.25

1.27

1.19

2.05

3.90

5.95

4.57

5.84

.

Mar

1.25

.

2.25

4.25

1.23

1.15

1.98

3.81

5.89

4.51

5.75

.

Apr

1.26

.

2.25

4.25

1.24

1.15

2.06

3.96

5.74

4.60

5.81

.

May

1.26

.

2.25

4.25

1.22

1.09

1.75

3.57

5.22

4.16

5.48

.

Jun

1.22

.

2.20

4.22

1.04

0.94

1.51

3.33

4.97

4.07

5.23

.

Jul

1.01

.

2.00

4.00

1.05

0.92

1.93

3.98

5.49

4.59

5.63

.

Aug

1.03

.

2.00

4.00

1.08

0.97

2.44

4.45

5.88

4.82

6.26

.

Sep

1.01

.

2.00

4.00

1.08

0.96

2.23

4.27

5.72

4.63

6.15

.

Oct

1.01

.

2.00

4.00

1.10

0.94

2.26

4.29

5.70

4.64

5.95

*All values are given as a percent at an annual rate.
Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

17

updated through
11/17/03

Monetary Trends
M1

MZM

M2

M3

Percent change at an annual rate
1998.

0.99

11.66

7.29

10.35

1999.

2.00

12.41

7.56

8.74

2000.

0.17

8.09

6.09

9.41

2001.

3.01

15.78

8.76

11.40

2002.

4.72

12.78

7.61

7.99

2001

1

2.71

18.60

10.64

13.23

.

2

5.81

20.74

10.11

14.68

.

3

16.74

17.22

10.19

9.69

.

4

1.57

19.44

8.43

11.05

2002

1

5.61

9.86

6.76

5.82

.

2

-0.73

6.00

3.77

4.09

.

3

3.01

9.30

8.85

7.16

.

4

4.90

8.16

7.01

7.81

2003

1

7.55

6.10

6.36

5.58

.

2

9.17

6.54

8.53

6.40

.

3

8.89

12.86

8.98

9.94

2001

Oct

-37.27

12.94

-3.15

5.36

.

Nov

1.47

16.07

9.04

11.27

.

Dec

7.78

16.38

9.30

9.18

2002

Jan

6.29

4.44

5.30

1.75

.

Feb

6.24

11.50

8.41

7.74

.

Mar

1.93

3.15

0.20

1.94

.

Apr

-14.63

-0.39

-2.91

0.31

.

May

10.92

14.19

13.67

9.99

.

Jun

5.68

8.81

6.52

4.19

.

Jul

6.91

9.76

10.28

6.78

.

Aug

-11.32

8.53

8.06

9.71

.

Sep

6.87

4.96

5.42

6.00

.

Oct

11.46

0.49

7.98

1.64

.

Nov

-0.43

22.02

8.37

17.68

.

Dec

8.18

9.01

3.17

7.86
-0.02

2003

Jan

2.59

-0.41

5.97

.

Feb

20.21

7.69

10.92

6.56

.

Mar

3.47

0.84

2.50

3.72

.

Apr

0.37

1.48

4.81

2.60

.

May

20.30

15.06

18.06

13.08

.

Jun

13.24

14.60

9.75

9.28

.

Jul

5.47

19.57

10.09

17.80

.

Aug

7.28

6.59

8.45

3.39

.

Sep

2.01

-1.33

-4.25

-2.83

.

Oct

-1.07

-10.01

-5.85

-10.01

Research Division

18

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Monetary Trends

Definitions
M1: The sum of currency held outside the vaults of depository institutions,
Federal Reserve Banks, and the U.S. Treasury; travelers checks; and demand
and other checkable deposits issued by financial institutions (except demand
deposits due to the Treasury and depository institutions), minus cash items in
process of collection and Federal Reserve float.
MZM: M2 minus small-denomination time deposits, plus institutional money
market mutual funds. The label MZM was coined by William Poole (1991)
for this aggregate, proposed earlier by Motley (1988).
M2: M1 plus savings deposits (including money market deposit accounts) and
small-denomination (less than $100,000) time deposits issued by financial
institutions; and shares in retail money market mutual funds (funds with initial
investments of less than $50,000), net of retirement accounts.
M3: M2 plus large-denomination ($100,000 or more) time deposits; repurchase
agreements issued by depository institutions; Eurodollar deposits, specifically,
dollar-denominated deposits due to nonbank U.S. addresses held at foreign
offices of U.S. banks worldwide and all banking offices in Canada and the
United Kingdom; and institutional money market mutual funds (funds with
initial investments of $50,000 or more).
Bank Credit: All loans, leases, and securities held by commercial banks.
Domestic Nonfinancial Debt: Total credit market liabilities of the U.S.
Treasury, federally sponsored agencies, state and local governments, households,
and nonfinancial firms. End-of-period basis.
Adjusted Monetary Base: The sum of currency in circulation outside Federal
Reserve Banks and the U.S. Treasury, deposits of depository financial institutions at Federal Reserve Banks, and an adjustment for the effects of changes
in statutory reserve requirements on the quantity of base money held by
depositories. This series is a spliced chain index; see Anderson and Rasche
(1996a, 1996b, 2001).
Adjusted Reserves: The sum of vault cash and Federal Reserve Bank deposits
held by depository institutions and an adjustment for the effects of changes
in statutory reserve requirements on the quantity of base money held by
depositories. This series, a spliced chain index, is numerically larger than the
Board of Governors’ measure, which excludes vault cash not used to satisfy
statutory reserve requirements and Federal Reserve Bank deposits used to
satisfy required clearing balance contracts; see Anderson and Rasche (1996a,
2001).
Monetary Services Index: An index that measures the flow of monetary
services received by households and firms from their holdings of liquid
assets; see Anderson, Jones, and Nesmith (1997). Indexes are shown for the
assets included in M2; additional data are available at
research.stlouisfed.org/msi/index.html.
Note: M1, M2, M3, Bank Credit, and Domestic Nonfinancial Debt are constructed and published by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System. For details, see Federal Reserve Bulletin, tables 1.21 and 1.26. MZM,
Adjusted Monetary Base, Adjusted Reserves, and Monetary Services Index
are constructed and published by the Research Division of the Federal Reserve
Bank of St. Louis.

Notes
Page 3: MZM, or “Money, Zero Maturity,” includes the zero maturity, or
immediately available, components of M3. MZM equals M2 minus smalldenomination time deposits, plus institutional money market mutual funds
(that is, the money market mutual funds included in M3 but excluded from
M2). Readers are cautioned that since early 1994 the level and growth of M1
have been depressed by retail sweep programs that reclassify transactions
deposits (demand deposits and other checkable deposits) as savings deposits
overnight, thereby reducing banks’ required reserves; see Anderson and Rasche
(2001) and research.stlouisfed.org/aggreg/swdata.html. Primary Credit Rate,
Discount Rate, and Intended Federal Funds Rate shown in the chart
Reserve Market Rates are plotted as of the date of the change, while the
Effective Federal Funds Rate is plotted as of the end of the month. Interest
Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

rates in the table are monthly averages from the Board of Governors H.15
Statistical Release. The Treasury Yield Curve shows constant maturity yields
calculated by the U.S. Treasury Department for securities with 3 months and
1, 2, 3, 5, 7, and 10 years to maturity. Daily data and descriptions are available
at research.stlouisfed.org/ fred/data/wkly.html. See also Federal Reserve
Bulletin, table 1.35. The 30-year constant maturity series was discontinued
by the Treasury Department as of February 18, 2002.
Page 5: Checkable Deposits is the sum of demand and other checkable
deposits. Savings Deposits is the sum of money market deposit accounts
and passbook and statement savings. Time Deposits have a minimum initial
maturity of 7 days. Large Time Deposits are deposits of $100,000 or more.
Retail and Institutional Money Market Mutual Funds are as included in
M2 and the non-M2 component of M3, respectively.
Page 7: Excess Reserves plus RCB (Required Clearing Balance) Contracts
equals the amount of deposits at Federal Reserve Banks held by depository
institutions but not applied to satisfy statutory reserve requirements. (This
measure excludes the vault cash held by depository institutions that is not
applied to satisfy statutory reserve requirements.) Consumer Credit includes
most short- and intermediate-term credit extended to individuals. See Federal
Reserve Bulletin, table 1.55.
Page 8: Inflation Expectations measures include the quarterly Federal Reserve
Bank of Philadelphia Survey of Professional Forecasters, the monthly University
of Michigan Survey Research Center’s Surveys of Consumers, and the annual
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) range as reported to the Congress
in the February Humphrey-Hawkins Act testimony each year. Beginning
February 2000, the FOMC began using the personal consumption expenditures
(PCE) price index to report its inflation range and therefore is not shown on
this graph. CPI Inflation is the percentage change from a year ago in the
consumer price index for all urban consumers. Real Interest Rates are ex post
measures, equal to nominal rates minus CPI inflation.
Page 9: FOMC Intended Federal Funds Rate is the level (or midpoint of
the range, if applicable) of the federal funds rate that the staff of the FOMC
expected to be consistent with the desired degree of pressure on bank reserve
positions. In recent years, the FOMC has set an explicit target for the federal
funds rate.
Page 10: Federal Funds Rate and Inflation Targets shows the observed
federal funds rate, quarterly, and the level of the funds rate implied by applying
Taylor’s (1993) equation
ft*= 2.5 + π t –1 + (π t –1 – π* )/2 + 100 × (yt –1 – yt –1P )/2
to five alternative target inflation rates, π* = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 percent, where ft* is
the implied federal funds rate, π t –1 is the previous period’s inflation rate (PCE)
measured on a year-over-year basis, yt –1 is the log of the previous period’s
level of real gross domestic product (GDP), and yt –1P is the log of an estimate
of the previous period’s level of potential output. Potential Real GDP is as
estimated by the Congressional Budget Office.
Monetary Base Growth and Inflation Targets shows the quarterly growth
of the adjusted monetary base (modified to include an estimate of the effect
of sweep programs) implied by applying McCallum’s (1988, 1993) equation
∆MBt* = π* + (10-year moving average growth of real GDP)
– (4-year moving average of base velocity growth)
to five alternative target inflation rates, π* = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 percent, where ∆MBt*
is the implied growth rate of the adjusted monetary base. The 10-year moving
average growth of real GDP for a quarter t is calculated as the average
quarterly growth during the previous 40 quarters, at an annual rate, by the
formula ((yt – yt –40 )/40) × 4 × 100, where yt is the log of real GDP. The fouryear moving average of base velocity growth is calculated similarly. To adjust
the monetary base for the effect of retail-deposit sweep programs, we add to
the monetary base an amount equal to 10 percent of the total amount swept,
as estimated by the Federal Reserve Board staff. These estimates are imprecise,
at best. Sweep program data are available at
research.stlouisfed.org/aggreg/swdata.html.

19

Monetary Trends
Page 11: Implied One-Year Forward Rates are calculated by this Bank from
Treasury constant maturity yields. Yields to maturity, R(m), for securities with
m = 1,... , 10 years to maturity are obtained by linear interpolation between
reported yields. These yields are smoothed by fitting the regression suggested
by Nelson and Siegel (1987),
R(m) = a0 + (a1 + a2 )(1 – e–m/50 )/(m/50) – a2 × e–m/50,
and forward rates are calculated from these smoothed yields using equation
(a) in table 13.1 of Shiller (1990),
f(m) = [D(m)R(m) – D(m–1)] / [D(m) – D(m–1)],
where duration is approximated as D(m) = (1 – e –R(m) × m)/R(m). These rates
are linear approximations to the true instantaneous forward rates; see Shiller
(1990). For a discussion of the use of forward rates as indicators of inflation
expectations, see Sharpe (1997). Rates on 3-Month Eurodollar Futures and
Rates on Selected Federal Funds Futures Contracts trace through time the
yield on three specific contracts. Rates on Federal Funds Futures on
Selected Dates displays a single day’s snapshot of yields for contracts expiring
in the months shown on the horizontal axis. Inflation-Indexed Treasury
Bonds are yields on the most recently issued inflation-indexed securities of
10- and 30-year original maturities. Inflation-Indexed Treasury Yield Spreads
equal, for 10- and 30-year maturities, the difference between the yields on
the most recently issued inflation-indexed securities and the unadjusted bond
yields of similar maturity. Inflation-Indexed 30-Year Government Bonds
shows the yield of an inflation-indexed bond that is scheduled to mature in
approximately (but not greater than) 30 years. The current bond for Canada
has a maturity date of 12/01/2031, the current bond for France has a maturity
date of 7/25/2032, the current U.K. bond has a maturity date of 7/22/2030,
and the current U.S. bond has a maturity date of 4/15/2032. Inflation-Indexed
10-Year Government Bonds shows the yield of an inflation-indexed bond that
is scheduled to mature in approximately (but not greater than) 10 years. The
current bond for France has a maturity date of 7/25/2013, the current U.K. bond
has a maturity date of 8/16/2013, and the current U.S. bond has a maturity
date of 7/15/2013.
Page 12: Velocity (for MZM and M2) equals the ratio of GDP, measured in
current dollars, to the level of the monetary aggregate. MZM and M2 Own
Rates are weighted averages of the rates received by households and firms
on the assets included in the aggregates. Prior to 1982, the 3-month T-bill
rates are secondary market yields. From 1982 forward, rates are 3-month
constant maturity yields.
Page 13: Real Gross Domestic Product is GDP as measured in chained 1996
dollars. The Gross Domestic Product Price Index is the implicit price deflator
for GDP, which is defined by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, as the ratio of GDP measured in current dollars to GDP
measured in chained 1996 dollars.

Bureau of Economic Analysis
GDP.
Bureau of Labor Statistics
CPI.
Chicago Board of Trade
Federal funds futures contract.
Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Eurodollar futures.
Congressional Budget Office
Potential real GDP.
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Survey of Professional Forecasters inflation expectations.
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Adjusted monetary base and adjusted reserves, monetary services index,
MZM own rate, one-year forward rates.
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
International interest and inflation rates.
Standard & Poor’s
Stock price-earnings ratio, stock price composite index.
University of Michigan Survey Research Center
Median expected price change.
U.S. Department of the Treasury
U.S. inflation-indexed security yields.

References
Anderson, Richard G. and Robert H. Rasche (1996a). “A Revised Measure of
the St. Louis Adjusted Monetary Base,” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Review, March/April, 78(2), pp. 3-13.
____ and ____(1996b). “Measuring the Adjusted Monetary Base in an Era of
Financial Change,” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, November/
December, 78(6), pp. 3-37.
____ and ____(2001). “Retail Sweep Programs and Bank Reserves, 1994-1999,”
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, January/February, pp. 51-72.
____ , Barry E. Jones and Travis D. Nesmith (1997). “Special Report: The
Monetary Services Indexes Project of the Federal Reserve Bank of St.
Louis,” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, January/February,
79(1), pp. 31-82.
McCallum, Bennett T. (1988). “Robustness Properties of a Monetary Policy
Rule,” Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, vol. 29,
pp. 173-204.

Page 14: Investment Securities are all securities held by commercial banks
in both investment and trading accounts.

____(1993). “Specification and Analysis of a Monetary Policy Rule for Japan,”
Bank of Japan Monetary and Economic Studies, November, pp. 1-45.

Page 17: Treasury Yields are Treasury constant maturities as reported in the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System’s H.15 release.

Motley, Brian (1988). “Should M2 Be Redefined?” Federal Reserve Bank of
San Francisco Economic Review, Winter, pp. 33-51.

Sources

Nelson, Charles R. and Andrew F. Siegel (1987). “Parsimonious Modeling of
Yield Curves,” Journal of Business, October, pp. 473-89.

Agence France Trésor
French inflation-indexed bond yields.
Bank of Canada
Canadian inflation-indexed bond yields.

Poole, William (1991). Statement before the Subcommittee on Domestic
Monetary Policy of the Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs,
U.S. House of Representatives, November 6, 1991. Government Printing
Office, Serial No. 102-82.

Bank of England
U.K. inflation-indexed bond yields.

Sharpe, William F. (1997). Macro-Investment Analysis, on-line textbook
available at www.stanford.edu/~wfsharpe/mia/mia.htm.

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Monetary aggregates and components: H.6 release. Bank credit and components: H.8 release. Consumer credit: G.19 release. Required reserves,
excess reserves, clearing balance contracts, and discount window borrowing:
H.4.1 and H.3 releases. Interest rates: H.15 release. Nonfinancial commercial paper: Board of Governors website. Nonfinancial debt: Z.1 release.
M2 own rate.

Shiller, Robert (1990). “The Term Structure of Interest Rates,” Handbook of
Monetary Economics, vol. 1, B. Friedman and F. Hahn, eds., pp. 627-722.

20

Taylor, John B. (1993). “Discretion versus Policy Rules in Practice,” CarnegieRochester Conference Series on Public Policy, vol. 39, pp. 195-214.
Note: Articles from this Bank’s Review are available on the Internet at
research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/.
Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis