Quarterly

F.120.b State and Local Government Employee Retirement Funds: Defined Benefit Plans


The Financial Accounts (formerly known as the Flow of Funds accounts) are a set of financial accounts used to track the sources and uses of funds by sector. They are a component of a system of macroeconomic accounts including the National Income and Product accounts (NIPA) and balance of payments accounts, all of which serve as a comprehensive set of information on the economy’s performance.(1) Some important inferences that can be drawn from the Financial accounts are the financial strength of a given sector, new economic trends, changes in the composition of wealth, and development of new financial instruments over time.(1)
Sectors are compiled into three categories: households, nonfinancial businesses, and banks. The sources of funds for a sector are its internal funds (savings from income after consumption) and external funds (loans from banks and other financial intermediaries). (1) Funds for a given sector are used for its investments in physical and financial assets. Dividing sources and uses of funds into two categories helps the staff of the Federal Reserve System pay particular attention to external sources of funds and financial uses of funds.(2) One example is whether households are borrowing more from banks—or in other words, whether household debt is rising. Another example might be whether banks are using more of their funds to provide loans to consumers. Transactions within a sector are not shown in the accounts; however, transactions between sectors are.(2) Monitoring the external flows of funds provides insights into a sector’s health and the performance of the economy as a whole.
Data for the Financial accounts are compiled from a large number of reports and publications, including regulatory reports such as those submitted by banks, tax filings, and surveys conducted by the Federal Reserve System.(2) The Financial accounts are published quarterly as a set of tables in the Federal Reserve’s Z.1 statistical release.
(1) Teplin, Albert M. “The U.S. Flow of Funds Accounts and Their Uses.” Federal Reserve Bulletin, July 2001; http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/bulletin/2001/0701lead.pdf.
(2) Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. “Guide to the Flow of Funds Accounts.” 2000, http://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/.

For questions on the data, please contact the data source: https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/ContactUs/feedback.aspx?refurl=/releases/z1/%
For questions on FRED functionality, please contact: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/contactus/


   

Please select a date range

    Q4 1946    
 
 
    Q4 2025
Millions of U.S. Dollars
Line Name Q4 2025 Q3 2025 Q4 2024
line 1
Net acquisition of financial assets
233,502 233,506 233,448
line 2
Checkable deposits and currency
3,004 30,784 17,376
line 3
Time and savings deposits
0 0 0
line 4
Money market fund shares
13,596 19,320 7,252
line 5
Security repurchase agreements
53,992 142,256 126,916
line 6
Debt securities
80,856 202,056 50,160
line 7
Open market paper
3,324 4,044 8,196
line 8
Treasury securities
18,228 151,160 -23,972
line 9
Agency- and GSE-backed securities
23,540 24,820 13,404
line 10
Municipal securities
0 0 0
line 11
Corporate and foreign bonds
35,764 22,032 52,532
line 12
Loans (mortgages)
-332 208 2,856
line 13
Corporate equities
-158,284 -265,632 -178,188
line 14
Mutual fund shares
-1,892 -51,896 1,824
line 15
Miscellaneous assets
242,562 156,410 205,252
line 16
Claims of pension fund on sponsor
258,054 258,854 269,388
line 17
Other
-15,492 -102,444 -64,136
line 18
Net increase in pension entitlements (liabilities)
238,028 238,028 238,028
   

Back to Top