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OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS Changing the money supply to change interest rates. GENERALLY SPEAKING INCREASING the money supply will DECREASE interest rates since there is more money in the market to be loaned out. DECREASING the money supply will INCREASE interest rates since there is less money in the market to loan out VISUAL MONEY SUPPLY INTEREST RATES r MONEY SUPPLY INTEREST RATES r The Federal Funds Rate When banks need to borrow reserves from other banks they go to the Fed Funds Market. Banks offer their excess funds to other banks for overnight lending to meet their reserve requirements. The Federal Reserve does not decree this interest rate, but they use bonds to add or take from this pool of money. This causes interest rates in the fund to go up or down. In this way they have the power to change the FFR at any given time. This is the most basic interest rate, and ALL others are derived from it. Mortgages, credit cards, and car loan rates all depend on the FFR. DAILY ACTIVITY The FED keeps constant tabs on the up to the minute FFR. They make sure that it trades within a given range over a specified time period, until the FOMC changes its policy stance. LINK: http://www.newyorkfed.org/charts/ff/ Note how much the Fed Funds Rate has changed over the last decade. Lows indicate recessions and slower economic output. Increases indicate growth in the economy, the Fed will raise rates to keep inflation in check. What does the recent trend tell us about the depth of the current recession? DIAGRAM FOR OPEN MARKET OPERATIONS: •The diagram below shows how an open market PURCHASE of $1 Billion dollars in government bonds affects bank reserves. An open market SALE would be just the opposite. FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM (Money credit) COMMERCIAL BANK (Bond to Fed) Federal Reserve Assets: $ 1,000,000,000 cash or credit Bank Assets Before Purchase: --$1, 000,000,000 Government Bond Excess Reserves Before Purchase: --$0, banks has no excess reserves AFTER PURCHASE BY FED: Federal Reserve Assets: $1,000,000,000 Government Bond Bank Assets After Purchase $1,000,000,000 in Excess Reserves •The bank can now loan out these reserves to customers seeking loans. As you can see, the Fed just “created” $1 billion dollars in loanable funds for the banking system, thus increasing the money supply and pushing interest rates DOWN! •It is in this way that the FED routinely adds and subtracts money from the total amount of reserves in the banking system. Since bank deposits can easily become money, changing their reserves changes the money supply. •The FED can easily reverse its decision when needed by making the opposite move in the BOND MARKET.