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The Iowa Electronic Markets Federal Reserve Monetary Policy and the IEM Course Materials using the IEM Prepared for the Spring 2000 Money & Banking Courses By Jan E. Christopher Eric Rahimian Delaware State University Alabama A&M University Teaching Objectives Federal Reserve Monetary Policy and the IEM Apply the IEM to Understand Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Students should be able to: 1. Recognize the Goals of Monetary Policy 2. Understand the instruments to achieve Monetary Policy Goals 3. Determine the factors that guide the Monetary Policy Process 4. Understand how Monetary Policy is implemented by the FOMC 5. Trade shares in the FedPolicy Market on the IEM Evaluation of students’ performance Students should be able to: 1. Understand Current Economic Conditions and the Impact on the Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Market 2. Use the Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Market to Predict and Evaluate the Decisions of the Federal Open Market Committee Implement investment /trading strategies Submit reports on their trading activities of the Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Market on the IEM based on sound financial analysis Important Aspects of the Assignment Students replicate analysis from the lecture. Students start with the FedPolicy Market and learn how the actual financial markets operate. Students build on previous knowledge and experience. FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 2 Lecture Outline Federal Reserve Monetary Policy and the IEM 1. Introduction 2. Macroeconomic Issues 3. Definition of Concepts 4. Federal Monetary Policy Instruments 5. Applying the IEM 6. Conclusions Lecture Notes The Federal Reserve System (the Fed) is the central bank of the United States. It is in charge of implementation of the nation’s monetary policy. An objective of the monetary policy is to provide sufficient money and credit for economy to allow long-run economic growth without creating inflationary pressures. The Fed also tries to minimize the shortrun fluctuations causing a recession or an excessive inflation. The Federal Reserve System functions 1. Supervision of regulation of the financial systems. 2. Maintaining an easy-running payments system by clearing checks and provision of sufficient amount of currency and coins for circulation. FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 3 3. Serving as the fiscal agent of the government. The Fed handles the United States government’s debt and cash balances. The Fed also clears the treasury checks and issues and redeems securities. Federal Reserve System history An in-depth discussion of the background and history of the United States Federal Reserve System is in your text. Briefly, in the early 20th century the lawmakers decided that the nation needs a central bank that functions as the bank of banks. The Fed was established in 1913. Since the lack of confidence in commercial banks and their weakness in responding to large scale deposits withdrawals were considered the main causes of the 1907 banking crisis, the Fed was established to monitor the commercial banks and to lend funds to them during emergencies. It is this duty that entitles the Fed as the lender of the last resort. The reason for this function is to preserve the soundness of the financial systems. Even from the beginning, it was realized that the Fed, as the central bank of the United States, needs to decentralize its policy-making authority. Hence, the original Federal Reserve Act (1913) created 12 Reserve Banks. The Fed was created as an independent agency to prevent the political process from dictating its policies. Its internal structure supports this independence. The Board of Governors of the Fed is on the top of the organizational structure. It has seven members, each of whom is appointed to a 14-year term. There is no appropriation from the Congress for the Fed and its Board of Governors. The Fed earns its funds from the interest on loans to depository institutions and its holdings of government securities. The FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 4 Board members do not need to defend their actions to the Congress, the President of the United States and the public. In addition the law and regulations of the Fed provide for its exemption from the Freedom of Information Act and “government in the sunshine” legislation, which call for openness of policy making meetings. It is important to note that the independence of the Fed should not be interpreted as a sign of complete separation from the Federal Government. Actually, the Congress can pass laws that the Fed must obey in the future. Also, though unlikely, the Congress can abolish the Fed. Nevertheless, the Fed is not under the direct supervision of anyone in the executive or legislative branches of government. Responsibilities of the Fed Board of Governors 1. Setting the required reserve ratio. This is the percentage of the deposits in the depository institutions that must be kept in required reserve account in the Fed. 2. Setting the discount rate. This is the interest rate on loans that the Fed makes to depository institutions. 3. Supervising and regulating the member banks and bank holding companies. 4. Overseeing the Federal Reserve Banks. 5. Establishing and administering the regulations in consumer finance. Responsibilities of the Federal Reserve Banks: FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 5 1. Proposing discount rates. 2. Lending funds to depository institutions (discount policy). 3. Furnishing currency 4. Collecting and clearing checks and transfer funds for depository institutions 5. Handling the US government debt and cash balances. The Federal Open Market Committee This committee is an important element of the Federal Reserve System. It directs the daily purchases and sales of government securities. It regularly meets and makes decisions on the targeted short-term interest rates. These are mainly the discount rate and the federal funds rate. The discount rate is the rate that depository institutions are charged on the borrowings of reserves from the Fed. Federal funds may be defined as the reserves of the depository institutions in the federal reserve banks. These funds are now frequently borrowed by commercial banks on a short-term basis. The interest rate charged on the borrowed reserves is called the federal funds rate. Today, the federal funds market is much larger than before. Commercial banks, particularly large ones, borrow these funds for any shortage of their required reserve as well as for earning additional interest by investing them or transferring them to sources of funds for loans with higher interests. In summary, the Fed pursues several goals including high employment, price stability, exchange rate stability and sustainable economic growth. Unemployment beyond the FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 6 natural rate leads to lower national output. High and unanticipated inflation rates distort the distribution of income and create uncertainty for investors and financial markets. Consistency and stability of the dollar’s exchange rate make international trade less risky. Hence, in addition to monitoring the interest rate, the Fed oversees the dollar fluctuations in the foreign exchange markets. Monetary policy can support or be used as an alternative to fiscal policy. Fiscal policy also can be used to support monetary policy. However, it is important to note that excessive use of one policy may make the implementation of the other policy more difficult. For example, a long-term deficit spending policy causes the accumulation of national debt and makes monetizing the debt difficult. FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 7 Federal Reserve Monetary Policy and the IEM Assignment Introduction to the IEM The Iowa Electronic Market (IEM for short) is a computerized market on which financial contracts are (bought or sold). For this assignment, we will be using a series of contracts based on the monetary policy decisions of the Federal Reserve's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) at their regularly scheduled meetings. Contracts listed in this market will initially appear in sets of three, with each set referring to a particular FOMC meeting. The three contracts will represent the three possible FOMC decisions made at that meeting regarding the federal-funds rate target -- to raise the target, to lower it, or to leave it unchanged. These contracts are listed on the IEM under the market label “Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Market” or “FedPolicy” for short. These contracts are described briefly later in this note and in more depth in the IEM Trader’s Manual. Detailed descriptions of these markets are available at the IEM web site: http://www.biz.uiowa.edu/iem/markets/computer.html Objectives The objectives of the IEM assignments are to help you apply class concepts in a "real world" way to learn how to: 1. Apply the IEM to Understand Federal Reserve Monetary Policy 2. Evaluate students’ performance 3. Implement investment /trading strategies Opening an IEM Account All students need to open an account with the Iowa Electronic Markets. This involves a minimum deposit of $5.00 dollars. Funds remaining in your account are refundable at the end of the semester. You can open an IEM account over the Internet. To do so, go to the sign-up web page: http://iemweb.biz.uiowa.edu/signup/ and follow the instructions given to you by your instructor. (DO NOT use forms other than those given to you by your instructor. Using other forms may result in fees or decreased deposits in your account.) After filling out your signup forms, you may need to deposit cash with the IEM office (319-335-0881). Your instructor will give you details about any deposits you need to make. FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 8 Accessing the IEM You can access the IEM through its web site address: http://www.biz.uiowa.edu/iem/ The IEM market has several contracts trading under it. The contracts of interest for our course are the Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Market (FedPolicy, for short). You access your trading account from the market pages or directly at: http://iemweb.biz.uiowa.edu/ Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Market The Federal Reserve Monetary Policy Contracts consist of three contracts. After every FOMC meeting, existing contracts in the series are liquidated and payments are made as described below. Then, new contracts are created as described below. The schedule of FOMC meetings can be found at the Federal Reserve System's web site: http://www.bog.frb.fed.us/fomc/. The Directors of the IEM reserve the right to introduce new contracts to the market as spin-offs of existing contracts. When a contract spin-off occurs, an original contract will be replaced by new contracts. This divides the payoff range of the original contract into sub-intervals. No holder of the prespin-off contracts will be adversely affected. Traders will receive the same number of each of the new contracts as they held in the original. The sum of the liquidation values of the new contracts will equal the liquidation value that would be paid to the original in the absence of a spin-off. Decisions to spin-off a contract will be announced at least two days in advance of the spin-off. The new contract names, the specifications regarding liquidation values and the timing of the spin-off will be included in the announcement. This announcement will appear as a News Bulletin on the WebEx login screen. Liquidation values will be set according to the contract descriptions. For example, if, at the close of the regularly scheduled FOMC meeting in month MMYY, the FOMC announces a decision to raise the target for the federal-funds rate, then each FRupMMYY contract held by a trader will be redeemed for $1.00, while the FRsameMMYY and FRdownMMYY contracts will expire with a $0.00 redemption value. Note that liquidation values will depend solely on decisions made at the specific regularly scheduled FOMC meeting to change or not change the federal-funds rate target from its level as of the start of that same meeting. Neither changes in the federal-funds rate target made during the inter-meeting period nor decisions regarding other monetary policy issues or instruments will have any direct bearing on those liquidation values. Contracts will be designated by a symbol and letter denoting up, down, or the same and the month and year of contract liquidation. Thus, the contracts traded in this market for liquidation in month “MM” and year “YY” are: Code FRupMMYY FRsameMMYY FRdownMMYY Contract Description / Liquidation Value $1.00 if the fed-funds rate target rises; $0 otherwise $1.00 if the fed-funds rate target remains unchanged; $0 otherwise $1.00 if the fed-funds rate target falls; $0 otherwise FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 9 The practice of the FOMC, initiated at the May 18, 1999 meeting, has been to release a public announcement shortly after each regular meeting describing the funds rate target decision. (See http://www.bog.frb.fed.us/boarddocs/press/General/1999/.) So long as that practice continues, this public announcement will be the official source of FOMC policy decisions for purposes of determining liquidation values. If no such statement is released by the FOMC, the Wall Street Journal will become the official source. Specifically, the most definitive statement of FOMC actions appearing in the three consecutive issues of the WSJ (Central Edition) after the close of the FOMC meeting will be taken as the policy decision. If the decision of the FOMC remains unclear even after three consecutive WSJ issues, the outcome "fed-funds rate target remains unchanged" will be declared the result for purposes of determining liquidation values. The judgment of the IEM Board of Governors will be final in resolving questions regarding the nature of the FOMC decision, including questions arising from typographical or clerical errors. Trading in a set of contracts will continue for as much as two days beyond the end of the meeting on which those contracts are based. If an official announcement of the FOMC decision is made at the end of the meeting or within two days thereafter, the market will close and contracts will be liquidated as soon as is possible after the appearance of that announcement. If no official announcement has been made by 5:00 PM CST on the second business day after the end of the meeting, the market will close to further trading at that time. The following business day a decision regarding liquidation values will be made by the Board of Governors of the IEM based on reports appearing in the WSJ, with liquidations occurring shortly thereafter. Trading on the IEM You can trade on the IEM in several ways. First, you can buy or sell unit portfolios (i.e., bundles). A unit portfolio is a set of bundles, consisting of one of each of the three contracts (FRupMMYY, FRsameMMYY, and FRdownMMYY) associated with each FOMC meeting, can be purchased from or sold to the IEM system at any time at the price of $1.00 per bundle. Note that, regardless of the announced FOMC policy decision, the liquidation values of the three contracts in a bundle will total $1.00, the same as the price at which the bundles can be bought or sold. The bundles will be designated FR1$MMYY, where the suffix MMYY identifies the month of the FOMC meeting. To buy and sell bundles, select the FR1$MMYY bundle from the "Market Order" drop down menu on the market trading screen. Second, you can buy or sell using a "market order." On the market screen, you will see that some individuals have posted an order to buy or to sell a contract (e.g., FRupMMYY, the contract for liquidation in the Federal Reserve Monetary Policy) at a specific price. If you believe that a posted order represents a good deal, you can buy or sell at the posted price. (To do this, select the appropriate contract under “Buy at Best Ask” or “Sell at Best Bid” in the “Market Order” drop down menu. Enter a quantity and press the “Market Order” button.) Third, you can buy or sell using a "limit order." To do so, you state the price at which you are willing to buy or sell a contract and post a limit order on the screen. In doing so, you are waiting for someone who is willing to buy or sell at your stated price. In this manner, when your order executes, it will execute at your stated price, not at somebody else’s. The negative is that the order may never execute because nobody likes your price because it is too high or low. (To place a limit order, select the appropriate contract under “Post a Bid” or “Post an Ask” in the “Limit Order” drop down menu. Enter a price, quantity and expiration date and press the “Limit Order” button.) FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 10 Completing Your Assignments and Submitting Them As you can see below, the IEM assignments are extensive, multi-part assignments that draw together many concepts from the class. It would be wise to work on the various parts of the assignments as we go over the relevant topics in class. To prepare the assignments for submission, please use the following guidelines: 1. Each assignment must be typed. Label clearly each assignment with a cover page giving your name, student number, and section number. 2. Complete each part in a separate section clearly labeling them Part 1, Part 2, etc. 3. Within each section, give the requested information, including sources of information gathered and equations used to calculate results. 4. Turn in your completed assignment to your instructor on the date it is due. FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 11 IEM Assignment Part 1: Finding and Graphing Federal Funds Rates DUE: ___________ GOAL In this part of the assignment, you will study current and historical federal funds rates and will graph the changes of the targeted against actual federal funds rates from to the present time. Current Federal Funds Rates The Current Federal Funds Rate may be found by going to the Federal Reserve System’s web site: http://www.bog.frb.fed.us or to the Wall Street Journal within three days after each FOMC meeting. If you use a print source such as the Wall Street Journal, notice that, typically, the decision is printed in the Central Edition within three days of the FOMC meeting. Note: While you are free to use any source, the contracts are liquidated based on FOMC public announcements and the Wall Street Journal. Historical Federal Funds Rates Download the historical target Federal Funds Rate data from the IEM web site at: http://www.biz.uiowa.edu/iem/markets/fedfundfund.html You will use these data in later parts of this exercise. Download 5 years of the actual Federal Funds Rate data from the Federal Reserve Board’s web site as follows. Go to http://www.bog.frb.fed.us/releases/H15/data/d/fedfund.txt Save this data in Excel for later use. Graph the Actual and Targeted Federal Funds Rates on an X-Y graph for comparison. For each of the dates when the Fed changes the target rate, enter two observations, one with the old target rate and one with the new target rate. To do this, insert a row before each date when the target rate changes. Then, copy the date up into this row to show the date of the change. Then, copy the old target rate down from the previous row. (For example, the Fed changed the rate from 5.5% to 6% on February 1,1999, so you should have two rows for February 1, 1999: the first one with the 5.5% rate and the second one with the 6% rate. This should lead to a graph in which the rates stay flat between meetings when the Fed changes the rate. You do not need to follow this procedure when graphing the daily actual rates, just when you are graphing the target rates.) FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 12 Returns to IEM Contracts Conduct at least one trade in the FedPolicy market between the ________ and ________. Report the date of the trade, the contract traded and the price. Attach a printout showing your trading activity. (You can either submit a “Processed Orders” report or an ‘Order History” report. To get the first report, make sure that the “confirm” box is checked on the trading screen. You will be asked to “execute” the order. Upon execution, the “Processed Orders” report will appear. To get the second report, go to “My Account Information” select “view order history” and print the resulting report.) Based on the date of your trade, what are the holding periods (in days) to the contract buyer if each contract is held to its liquidation date? Calculate and report the return over this holding period to the contract buyer if the contract liquidates for $1. Also calculate and report the return over the holding period to the contract buyer if the contract liquidates for $0. FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 13 Assignment 2 Using Unemployment Data to Analyze Monetary Policy DUE: ________ Procedure In this assignment, search for U.S. unemployment and the civilian labor force data by using the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ web site http://www.bls.gov . Download the data into Excel. Explain how the Federal Reserve System uses the unemployment rate to make decisions on monetary policy. Historical Analysis of BLS Unemployment Rates Use the monthly BLS statistics downloaded in part one for this part of the assignment. Analyze these data by reporting the following information (all numbers can be computed in Excel): 1. Report the historical average monthly unemployment data and discuss how the unemployment rate has changed since 1948. 2. Report the historical average monthly unemployment rate data and graph it against the actual Federal Funds Rate data obtained in Assignment 1, which was obtained from http://www.bog.frb.fed.us/releases/H15/data/d/fedfund.txt 3. Graph and compare the fluctuations in the unemployment data with the actual federal funds rates. FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 14 Test Questions: I. Essay Questions: a. What is the Fed? Why does it appear to have such a great influence on the economy? b. What are the four tools to achieve monetary policy? c. How does an increase in the Federal Funds Rate indicate a tighter monetary policy? d. How does your experience with the FedPolicy Market help you understand the impact of economic conditions (inflation, unemployment and stock prices) on the fluctuations and the volatility of the financial markets? e. Discuss whether an adverse aggregate supply shock can cause inflation. f. The economy has just experienced an n increase in aggregate demand. What should the Fed do? g. The economy has just experienced an n decrease in aggregate demand. What should the Fed do? h. Will the Fed have less power to affect the economy in the future? i. Is a financial crisis more likely to occur when the economy is experiencing inflation or deflation? j. What are the goals of monetary policy? Answers: a. What is the Fed? Why does it appear to have such a great influence on the economy? The Fed is the central bank of the nation and it has a significant power due to its function of implementing monetary policy. The Fed can change the amount of liquidity in the financial system. By changing the interest rate, it can change the amount of investment expenditures by businesses and the consumption of consumers. These changes impact the amount of real GDP and the price level in the economy. b. What are the four tools to achieve monetary policy? When the Fed sells securities (Open Market Operations), it takes reserves (liquidity) out of the system and hence with fewer reserves in the banks, fewer loans will be made. When the Fed decreases the Discount Rate, the member banks can borrow more reserves from the Fed and hence can increase credit to their customers. If the Fed increases the Required Reserve Ratio, the banks are required to set aside more required reserves and have less money to lend. The change in the Federal Funds Rate as a short-term interest rate is important in changing the ability of banks to borrow on a short-term basis. c. How does an increase in the Federal Funds Rate indicate a tighter monetary policy? FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 15 d. e. f. g. An increase in the targeted Federal Funds Rate is a sign of the decision of the Fed to tighten the money supply. This is because many banks borrow reserves from the Federal Funds Market on a short-term basis to enhance their ability to provide more credit on a continuous basis to businesses. How does your experience with the FedPolicy market help you understand the impact of economic conditions (inflation, unemployment and stock prices) on the fluctuations and the volatility of the financial markets? Comparing the Federal Funds Rate, Inflation Rate, and Unemployment data over some period of time, one can observe that higher Federal Funds Rates are established to either slow down the rate of the inflation or to ease the tightness in the labor market. One of the assignments of this class required the comparison of historical data on the unemployment rate and the Federal Funds Rate. Discuss whether an adverse aggregate supply shock can cause inflation? An adverse supply shock causes real output and employment to fall while prices will rise, an accommodating policy will reduce the recession but may aggravate the inflation. Cost-push inflation may result when the general price level rises due to increases in the prices of inputs. The economy has just experienced an increase in aggregate demand. What should the Fed do? An increase in aggregate demand may create demand-pull inflation and increase in output beyond the natural level. The Fed may follow a laissezfaire policy and let the economy return to long-run equilibrium at higher prices and the natural level of output. The Fed may also implement a contractionary monetary policy to control increases in the price level. Raising the Federal Funds Rate does this. The economy has just experienced a decrease in aggregate demand. What should the Fed do? A decrease in aggregate demand may create unintended increases in inventories. Businesses may cut production, employment, and prices, which may lead to a recession. The Fed response depends on its current policy objectives. It may choose to do nothing, in which case price expectations will decrease, the price level will decrease, and the short-run aggregate supply curve will shift to the right. Long-run equilibrium will be achieved at the full employment output level and a lower price level. On the other hand, if the Fed responds by expansionary monetary policy, aggregate demand will shift to the right and the economy will return to its pre-recession equilibrium. h. Will the Fed have less power to affect the economy in the future? If the share of intermediation by the banking system decreases, then the control over the banks declines. Also global economic forces may become stronger and hence, the Fed’s power may decline in the future. FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 16 i. Is a financial crisis more likely to occur when the economy is experiencing inflation or deflation? Financial crisis is defined as a critical reversal in the financial markets reflected by sharp declines in asset prices and the default of business firms in their financial obligations. In periods of inflation, financial crisis could result in the Fed raising interest rates and thus restricting business output; individuals may become less creditworthy thus bringing more risky borrowers into the credit markets. In periods of deflation, consumers and businesses alike would have difficulty meeting their financial obligations. If one party defaults, this often sets off a chain reaction. The drop in incomes, high rate of unemployment, increases in inventories, and layoffs can also exacerbate the problem. Unanticipated declines in the overall level of prices can intensify the risk of a financial crisis. j. What are the goals of monetary policy? Price stability, full employment, and satisfactory balance of payments are the short-term goals of monetary policy. Sustainable economic growth is the long-term goal of monetary policy. FALL 2000 EDITION LAST EDITED ON 9/00 WWW.BIZ.UIOWA.EDU/IEM/ASSIGNMENTS 17