What is the Fed?:
The Federal Reserve
System (the Fed) was created by Congress in 1913 to be the nation’s central
bank. It has four components:
·
A
seven-member Board of Governors, who set monetary policy,
·
A
12 member Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) who sets the Fed Funds Rate to be
charged by Federal Reserve Banks. All Board members sit on the FOMC.
·
Twelve
regional member banks located throughout the U.S.
·
Staff
economists who provide reports including the Beige Book and the Monetary Report to Congress
The board of Governors : Located in Washington DC the Board of Governors is at eh top of The FED's food chain. It is made up of 7 members who are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.
The regional Federal Reserve Banks: This is a network which includes the 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks and 25 branches. The 12 Regional Banks are located at: New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Richmond, Cleveland, St. Louis, Dallas, Chicago, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Atlanta and San Francisco.
The board of Governors : Located in Washington DC the Board of Governors is at eh top of The FED's food chain. It is made up of 7 members who are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.
The regional Federal Reserve Banks: This is a network which includes the 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks and 25 branches. The 12 Regional Banks are located at: New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Richmond, Cleveland, St. Louis, Dallas, Chicago, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Atlanta and San Francisco.
What is the Fed’s Function?:
The Fed’s most
important and visible function is to control inflation without triggering a recession. In addition to that, the Fed has
three other less visible functions:
1.
Supervise
the nation’s banking system to protect consumers.
2.
Maintain
the stability of the financial markets and constrain potential crises. (A good
example of this is the handling of the Long Term Capital Management Crisis in 1998).
3.
Be
the Central Bank for other banks, the U.S. Government, and foreign banks.
How Does the Fed Affect the U.S.
Economy?:
The Fed’s primary responsibility is
to manage inflation. As the nation's central bank, the Fed loans money to the
vast network of private banks. This gives it the power to regulate the economy
by making the money it loans expensive (by raising interest rates) or cheap (by
lowering rates).
Setting low interest rates is called expansionary monetary policy, and makes the economy grow faster.
If the economy grows too fast, it triggers inflation. Ongoing inflation is like
an insidious cancer that destroys any benefits of growth. Therefore, the Fed
must be sure to keep rates high enough to prevent inflation.
How Does the Fed Affect Traders?:
The unlikely charisma of Former Fed
Chair Alan Greenspan has made the Fed Chairman's position analogous to that of
a rock star. Every utterance of Fed Chair Ben Bernanke and the other Federal
Reserve Board members is scrutinized by the press for clues as to how the
economy is performing, and whether the Fed will raise or lower rates at their
next meeting.
Therefore, the Fed directly affects
your stock and bond mutual funds and your loan rates. By having such an
influence on thtrie economy, the Fed also indirectly affects your home's value
and even the possibility that you may get laid off.
FED System of US |
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