Federal Reserve

RECENT NEWS
Forbes  May 25  Comment 
How good is the Federal Reserve at its job?
MarketWatch  May 25  Comment 
Former investment banker Jerome Powell was sworn Friday in as a member of the Federal Reserve Board, the central bank announced. Powell, a former partner in the private equity firm, the Carlyle Group LP was confirmed to a Fed seat with a term...
Clusterstock  May 25  Comment 
The fiscal cliff is fast approaching and if Congress fails to act, more than $600 billion in tax and spending provisions are set to change at the end of the year. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) recently revised its projections and now...
FX Street  May 25  Comment 
FXstreet.com (Barcelona) - The current Operation Twist will end in late June and Danske Bank... For more information, read our latest forex news and reports.
Clusterstock  May 25  Comment 
As the trading debacle at JP Morgan continues to tarnish CEO Jamie Dimon's reputation, a number of officials have not-so-subtlety hinted that his role at the New York Federal Reserve should come to an end. They can add one more name to their...
Reuters  May 25  Comment 
The debate over how the Federal Reserve can best articulate its policy actions grew on Friday as a top Fed official warned against discretionary decisions, and asked whether a more systematic approach was desirable.
New York Times  May 24  Comment 
It’s time for Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase to step down from the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, an economist writes.
Bankstocks.com  May 24  Comment 
Benzinga  May 23  Comment 
The market started the day off down significantly. The Dow Jones was down nearly 180 points earlier in the session. Then, in the second half, markets began to rally sharply into the close and went into positive territory. Stocks may have been...
Benzinga  May 23  Comment 
Yesterday, Bank of America put out a report highlighting that the best QE indicators are the 10-year and 5-year breakeven rates. For those who don't know, the breakeven rate is equivalent to market expectations of inflation. For the 10-year...




RELATED WIKI ARTICLES

Related Articles

 
TOP CONTRIBUTORS

The Federal Reserve is the third central bank of the USA. It was legally established on December 23, 1913, when US president Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal Reserve System Act. The Federal Reserve was blamed to have deepened the Great Depression after the crash of 1929. In a panicky reaction it then deflated money supply, causing a lasting and deep economic contraction.

In the inflationary period from 1973 - caused by the first oil shock - to 1981 chairman Paul Volcker managed to battle inflation successfully by raising the leading interest rate to more than 20%. At the same time Volcker succeeded in keeping the economy out of a drawn-out recession.

The policy style changed with the nomination of Alan Greenspan in 1987. Only 2 months into office Greenspan was confronted with the Black Monday of 1987, when the Dow Jones Industrials Average fell 22%, its biggest loss ever in a day. Remembering the fatal results of tight liqudity after the crash of 1929 Greenspan offered banks all the funds they needed in order to avoid a meltdown of the stock market. Alan Greenspan can also be credited with blowing up the biggest debt bubble of all times in the new millennium. By lowering the Fed Funds rate to a record low of 1% the Federal Reserve contributed heavily to the American housing boom that turned out to be a bubble based on easy credit. Greenspan conceded in 2008 to Congress that he erred on wrong side when the Federal Reserve thought that the financial industry should not be burdened with more oversight. At this time the USA had fallen in the biggest financial crisis ever.

Wow, your post makes mine look febele. More power to you!

Please teach the rest of these internet hooliagns how to write and research!

The Federal Reserve Banks

The 12 Federal Reserve Banks were established by Congress as the operating arms of the nation's central banking system. Many of the services provided to depository institutions and the federal government by this network of Reserve Banks are similar to services provided by commercial banks and thrift institutions to business customers and individuals.

Reserve Banks

  • hold the cash reserves of depository institutions and make loans to them
  • move currency and coin into and out of circulation, and collect and process millions of checks each day
  • provide checking accounts for the Treasury, issue and redeem government securities, and act in other ways as fiscal agent for the U.S. government
  • supervise and examine commercial banks that are members of the Federal Reserve System for safety and soundness
  • participate in the activity that is the primary responsibility of the Federal Reserve System, the setting of monetary policy.
Wikinvest © 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012. Use of this site is subject to express Terms of Service, Privacy Policy, and Disclaimer. By continuing past this page, you agree to abide by these terms. Any information provided by Wikinvest, including but not limited to company data, competitors, business analysis, market share, sales revenues and other operating metrics, earnings call analysis, conference call transcripts, industry information, or price targets should not be construed as research, trading tips or recommendations, or investment advice and is provided with no warrants as to its accuracy. Stock market data, including US and International equity symbols, stock quotes, share prices, earnings ratios, and other fundamental data is provided by data partners. Stock market quotes delayed at least 15 minutes for NASDAQ, 20 mins for NYSE and AMEX. Market data by Xignite. See data providers for more details. Company names, products, services and branding cited herein may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The use of trademarks or service marks of another is not a representation that the other is affiliated with, sponsors, is sponsored by, endorses, or is endorsed by Wikinvest.
Powered by MediaWiki