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  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    View the total value of the assets of all Federal Reserve Banks as reported in the weekly balance sheet.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

  • Billions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Seasonally Adjusted 1973-01-03 to 2023-03-15 (2 days ago)

    For further information, please refer to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System's H.8 release, online at http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h8/.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The current face value of mortgage-backed obligations held by Federal Reserve Banks. These securities are guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or Ginnie Mae.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The total face value of U.S. Treasury securities held by the Federal Reserve. This total is broken out in the lines below. Purchases or sales of U.S. Treasury securities by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY) are made in the secondary market, or with various foreign official and international organizations that maintain accounts at the Federal Reserve. FRBNY's purchases or sales in the secondary market are conducted only through primary dealers. Bills: The current face value of the Federal Reserve's outright holdings of Treasury bills. Notes and bonds, nominal: The current face value of the Federal Reserve's outright holdings of nominal Treasury notes and bonds. Notes and bonds, inflation-indexed: The current face value of the Federal Reserve's outright holdings of inflation-indexed Treasury notes and bonds. Inflation compensation: Inflation compensation reflects adjustments for the effects of inflation to the principal of inflation-indexed securities.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q1 1984 to Q4 2022 (Mar 8)

    This series is found in Assets and Liabilities of FDIC-Insured Commercial Banks and Savings Institutions. The Quarterly Banking Profile is a quarterly publication that provides the earliest comprehensive summary of financial results for all FDIC-insured institutions. See Notes to Users (https://www.fdic.gov/analysis/quarterly-banking-profile/qbp/timeseries/qbpnot.pdf) for more information.

  • Percent, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q4 1945 to Q4 2022 (Mar 9)

    Source ID: FL153064486.Q For more information about the Flow of Funds tables, see the Financial Accounts Guide (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/Default.aspx). With each quarterly release, the source may make major data and structural revisions to the series and tables. These changes are available in the Release Highlights (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/FOFHighlight.aspx). In the Financial Accounts, the source identifies each series by a string of patterned letters and numbers. For a detailed description, including how this series is constructed, see the series analyzer (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/SeriesAnalyzer.aspx?s=FL153064486&t=) provided by the source.

  • Billions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Seasonally Adjusted 1973-01-03 to 2023-03-15 (2 days ago)

    For further information, please refer to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System's H.8 release, online at http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h8/.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The FOMC has authorized temporary reciprocal currency arrangements (central bank liquidity swaps) with certain foreign central banks to help provide liquidity in U.S. dollars to overseas markets. These swaps involve two transactions. First, when the foreign central bank draws on the swap line, it sells a specified amount of its currency to the Federal Reserve in exchange for dollars at the prevailing market exchange rate. The foreign currency that the Federal Reserve acquires is placed in an account for the Federal Reserve at the foreign central bank. This line in the statistical release reports the dollar value of the foreign currency held under these swaps. Second, the dollars that the Federal Reserve provides are deposited in an account for the foreign central bank at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. At the same time as the draw on the swap line, the Federal Reserve and the foreign central bank enter into a binding agreement for a second transaction in which the foreign central bank is obligated to repurchase the foreign currency at a specified future date at the same exchange rate. At the conclusion of the second transaction, the foreign central bank pays a market-based rate of interest to the Federal Reserve. Central bank liquidity swaps are of various maturities, ranging from overnight to three months.

  • Millions of Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q4 1945 to Q4 2022 (Mar 9)

    Source ID: FL634090005.Q For more information about the Flow of Funds tables, see the Financial Accounts Guide (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/Default.aspx). With each quarterly release, the source may make major data and structural revisions to the series and tables. These changes are available in the Release Highlights (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/FOFHighlight.aspx). In the Financial Accounts, the source identifies each series by a string of patterned letters and numbers. For a detailed description, including how this series is constructed, see the series analyzer (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/SeriesAnalyzer.aspx?s=FL634090005&t=) provided by the source.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

  • Millions of Euros, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 1999-01-01 to 2023-03-17 (5 days ago)

    A longer history for this series is available on the monthly series ECBASSETS (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/ECBASSETS). Copyright, 2016, European Central Bank (ECB). Reprinted with permission.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    Repurchase agreements reflect some of the Federal Reserve's temporary open market operations. Repurchase agreements are transactions in which securities are purchased from a primary dealer under an agreement to sell them back to the dealer on a specified date in the future. The difference between the purchase price and the repurchase price reflects an interest payment. The Federal Reserve may enter into repurchase agreements for up to 65 business days, but the typical maturity is between one and 14 days. Federal Reserve repurchase agreements supply reserve balances to the banking system for the length of the agreement. The Federal Reserve employs a naming convention for these transactions based on the perspective of the primary dealers: the dealers receive cash while the Federal Reserve receives the collateral.

  • 100 Million Yen, Monthly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Apr 1998 to Feb 2023 (Mar 2)

    Copyright, 2016, Bank of Japan.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The amount of securities held by Federal Reserve Banks. This quantity is the cumulative result of permanent open market operations: outright purchases or sales of securities, conducted by the Federal Reserve. Section 14 of the Federal Reserve Act defines the securities that the Federal Reserve is authorized to buy and sell.

  • Ratio, Monthly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Jan 2008 to Jul 2022 (Feb 1)

    This series is calculated by using the core measure of liquid assets as the numerator and total assets as the denominator. The ratio can also be calculated using the broad measure of liquid assets as the numerator. This series is a liquid asset ratio, which provides an indication of the liquidity available to meet expected and unexpected demands for cash. The level of liquidity indicates the ability of the deposit-taking sector to withstand shocks to their balance sheet. Copyright © 2016, International Monetary Fund. Reprinted with permission. Complete terms of use and contact details are available at http://www.imf.org/external/terms.htm.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    Primary credit is a lending program available to depository institutions that are in generally sound financial condition. Primary credit is available in terms from overnight to 28 days. In extending primary credit, Reserve Banks must judge that the borrower is likely to remain eligible for primary credit for the term of the loan.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    Primary credit is a lending program available to depository institutions that are in generally sound financial condition. Primary credit is available in terms from overnight to 90 days. In extending primary credit, Reserve Banks must judge that the borrower is likely to remain eligible for primary credit for the term of the loan.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q1 1984 to Q4 2022 (Mar 8)

    This series is found in Assets and Liabilities of FDIC-Insured Commercial Banks and Savings Institutions. The Quarterly Banking Profile is a quarterly publication that provides the earliest comprehensive summary of financial results for all FDIC-insured institutions. See Notes to Users (https://www.fdic.gov/analysis/quarterly-banking-profile/qbp/timeseries/qbpnot.pdf) for more information.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q1 1984 to Q4 2022 (Mar 8)

    This series is found in Assets and Liabilities of FDIC-Insured Commercial Banks and Savings Institutions. The Quarterly Banking Profile is a quarterly publication that provides the earliest comprehensive summary of financial results for all FDIC-insured institutions. See Notes to Users (https://www.fdic.gov/analysis/quarterly-banking-profile/qbp/timeseries/qbpnot.pdf) for more information.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    Loans is the sum of "Primary credit," "Secondary credit," "Seasonal credit," "Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility," and "Other credit extensions.

  • Percent, Quarterly, Seasonally Adjusted Q1 1991 to Q4 2022 (Feb 21)

    The 100 largest banks are measured by consolidated foreign and domestic assets.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The total face value of U.S. Treasury securities held by the Federal Reserve. Purchases or sales of U.S. Treasury securities by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY) are made in the secondary market, or with various foreign official and international organizations that maintain accounts at the Federal Reserve. FRBNY's purchases or sales in the secondary market are conducted only through primary dealers.

  • Percent of Nominal GDP, Annual, Not Seasonally Adjusted 1701 to 2016 (2018-03-12)

    This measure uses a lagged break-adjusted measure of nominal GDP as the denominator. This series was constructed by the Bank of England as part of the Three Centuries of Macroeconomic Data project by combining data from a number of academic and official sources. For more information, please refer to the Three Centuries spreadsheet at https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/statistics/research-datasets. Users are advised to check the underlying assumptions behind this series in the relevant worksheets of the spreadsheet. In many cases alternative assumptions might be appropriate. Users are permitted to reproduce this series in their own work as it represents Bank calculations and manipulations of underlying series that are the copyright of the Bank of England provided that underlying sources are cited appropriately. For appropriate citation please see the Three Centuries spreadsheet for guidance and a list of the underlying sources.

  • Billions of Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q4 1945 to Q4 2022 (Mar 9)

    Source ID: FL154090005.Q For more information about the Flow of Funds tables, see the Financial Accounts Guide (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/Default.aspx). With each quarterly release, the source may make major data and structural revisions to the series and tables. These changes are available in the Release Highlights (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/FOFHighlight.aspx). In the Financial Accounts, the source identifies each series by a string of patterned letters and numbers. For a detailed description, including how this series is constructed, see the series analyzer (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/SeriesAnalyzer.aspx?s=FL154090005&t=) provided by the source.

  • Percent, Annual, Not Seasonally Adjusted 1960 to 2020 (2022-03-23)

    Ratio of central bank assets to GDP. Central bank assets are claims on domestic real nonfinancial sector by the Central Bank. Claims on domestic real nonfinancial sector by the Central Bank as a share of GDP, calculated using the following deflation method: {(0.5)*[Ft/P_et + Ft-1/P_et-1]}/[GDPt/P_at] where F is Central Bank claims, P_e is end-of period CPI, and P_a is average annual CPI. Raw data are from the electronic version of the IMF's International Financial Statistics. Central Bank claims (IFS lines 12, a-d); GDP in local currency (IFS line 99B..ZF or, if not available, line 99B.CZF); end-of period CPI (IFS line 64M..ZF or, if not available, 64Q..ZF); and annual CPI (IFS line 64..ZF). (International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics, and World Bank GDP estimates) Source Code: GFDD.DI.06

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The FOMC has authorized temporary reciprocal currency arrangements (central bank liquidity swaps) with certain foreign central banks to help provide liquidity in U.S. dollars to overseas markets. These swaps involve two transactions. First, when the foreign central bank draws on the swap line, it sells a specified amount of its currency to the Federal Reserve in exchange for dollars at the prevailing market exchange rate. The foreign currency that the Federal Reserve acquires is placed in an account for the Federal Reserve at the foreign central bank. This line in the statistical release reports the dollar value of the foreign currency held under these swaps.Second, the dollars that the Federal Reserve provides are deposited in an account for the foreign central bank at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. At the same time as the draw on the swap line, the Federal Reserve and the foreign central bank enter into a binding agreement for a second transaction in which the foreign central bank is obligated to repurchase the foreign currency at a specified future date at the same exchange rate. At the conclusion of the second transaction, the foreign central bank pays a market-based rate of interest to the Federal Reserve. Central bank liquidity swaps are of various maturities, ranging from overnight to three months.

  • Percent, Quarterly, Seasonally Adjusted Q1 1985 to Q4 2022 (Feb 21)

    Charge-off rates are annualized, net of recoveries. The 100 largest banks are measured by consolidated foreign and domestic assets.

  • Billions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 1999-10-13 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    Repurchase agreements reflect some of the Federal Reserve's temporary open market operations. Repurchase agreements are transactions in which securities are purchased from a primary dealer under an agreement to sell them back to the dealer on a specified date in the future. The difference between the purchase price and the repurchase price reflects an interest payment. The Federal Reserve may enter into repurchase agreements for up to 65 business days, but the typical maturity is between one and 14 days. Federal Reserve repurchase agreements supply reserve balances to the banking system for the length of the agreement. The Federal Reserve employs a naming convention for these transactions based on the perspective of the primary dealers: the dealers receive cash while the Federal Reserve receives the collateral.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The current face value of mortgage-backed obligations held by Federal Reserve Banks. These securities are guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or Ginnie Mae.

  • Millions of Euros, Monthly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Dec 1998 to Jan 2020 (2020-02-04)

    This series will no longer be updated. It has been replaced with ECBASSETSW (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/ECBASSETSW) that updates on a weekly basis. Copyright, 2016, European Central Bank (ECB). Reprinted with permission.

  • Millions of Dollars, Quarterly, Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate Q4 1946 to Q4 2022 (Mar 9)

    Source ID: FA634090005.Q For more information about the Flow of Funds tables, see the Financial Accounts Guide (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/Default.aspx). With each quarterly release, the source may make major data and structural revisions to the series and tables. These changes are available in the Release Highlights (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/FOFHighlight.aspx). In the Financial Accounts, the source identifies each series by a string of patterned letters and numbers. For a detailed description, including how this series is constructed, see the series analyzer (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/SeriesAnalyzer.aspx?s=FA634090005&t=) provided by the source.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The total face value of U.S. Treasury securities held by the Federal Reserve. This total is broken out in the lines below. Purchases or sales of U.S. Treasury securities by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY) are made in the secondary market, or with various foreign official and international organizations that maintain accounts at the Federal Reserve. FRBNY's purchases or sales in the secondary market are conducted only through primary dealers. Bills: The current face value of the Federal Reserve's outright holdings of Treasury bills. Notes and bonds, nominal: The current face value of the Federal Reserve's outright holdings of nominal Treasury notes and bonds. Notes and bonds, inflation-indexed: The current face value of the Federal Reserve's outright holdings of inflation-indexed Treasury notes and bonds. Inflation compensation: Inflation compensation reflects adjustments for the effects of inflation to the principal of inflation-indexed securities.

  • Percent, Quarterly, Seasonally Adjusted Q1 1991 to Q4 2022 (Feb 21)

    The 100 largest banks are measured by consolidated foreign and domestic assets.

  • Billions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Seasonally Adjusted 1985-04-03 to 2023-03-15 (2 days ago)

    For further information, please refer to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System's H.8 release, online at http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h8/.

  • Billions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Seasonally Adjusted 1973-01-03 to 2023-03-15 (2 days ago)

    For further information, please refer to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System's H.8 release, online at http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h8/.

  • Billions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Seasonally Adjusted 1985-04-03 to 2023-03-15 (2 days ago)

    For further information, please refer to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System's H.8 release, online at http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h8/.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 1914-11-20 to 2018-04-11 (2021-02-10)

    This series is in the H.4.1 Factors Affecting Reserve Balances statistical press release and is available in FRED as WALCL (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/WALCL). Data before Wednesday, April 27, 1921 represent weekly values as of Friday. Authors: Cecilia Bao, Justin Chen, Nicholas Fries, Andrew Gibson, Emma Paine, and Kurt Schuler Studies in Applied Economics no. 115, Johns Hopkins University Institute for Applied Economics, Global Health, and the Study of Business Enterprise, July 2018; co-published with the Center for Financial Stability

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q4 1987 to Q4 2022 (Mar 8)

    This series is found in Assets and Liabilities of FDIC-Insured Commercial Banks and Savings Institutions. The Quarterly Banking Profile is a quarterly publication that provides the earliest comprehensive summary of financial results for all FDIC-insured institutions. See Notes to Users (https://www.fdic.gov/analysis/quarterly-banking-profile/qbp/timeseries/qbpnot.pdf) for more information.

  • Billions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 1988-11-30 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    Reserve Bank credit is the sum of securities held outright, repurchase agreements, term auction credit, other loans, net portfolio holdings of Commercial Paper Funding Facility LLC, net portfolio holdings of LLCs funded through the Money Market Investor Funding Facility, net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane LLC, net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane II LLC, net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane III LLC, float, central bank liquidity swaps, and other Federal Reserve assets.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The current face value of the Federal Reserve's outright holdings of nominal Treasury notes and bonds.

  • Billions of Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q4 1945 to Q4 2022 (Mar 9)

    Source ID: FL152000005.Q For more information about the Flow of Funds tables, see the Financial Accounts Guide (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/Default.aspx). With each quarterly release, the source may make major data and structural revisions to the series and tables. These changes are available in the Release Highlights (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/FOFHighlight.aspx). In the Financial Accounts, the source identifies each series by a string of patterned letters and numbers. For a detailed description, including how this series is constructed, see the series analyzer (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/SeriesAnalyzer.aspx?s=FL152000005&t=) provided by the source.

  • Millions of Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q4 1987 to Q4 2022 (Mar 9)

    Source ID: FL194090005.Q For more information about the Flow of Funds tables, see the Financial Accounts Guide (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/Default.aspx). With each quarterly release, the source may make major data and structural revisions to the series and tables. These changes are available in the Release Highlights (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/FOFHighlight.aspx). In the Financial Accounts, the source identifies each series by a string of patterned letters and numbers. For a detailed description, including how this series is constructed, see the series analyzer (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/SeriesAnalyzer.aspx?s=FL194090005&t=) provided by the source.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q1 1984 to Q4 2022 (Mar 8)

    This series is found in Assets and Liabilities of FDIC-Insured Commercial Banks and Savings Institutions. The Quarterly Banking Profile is a quarterly publication that provides the earliest comprehensive summary of financial results for all FDIC-insured institutions. See Notes to Users (https://www.fdic.gov/analysis/quarterly-banking-profile/qbp/timeseries/qbpnot.pdf) for more information.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The current face value of federal agency obligations held by Federal Reserve Banks. These securities are direct obligations of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banks.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    On November 25, 2008, the Federal Reserve announced a program to purchase mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae. The goal of the program is to provide support to mortgage and housing markets and to foster improved conditions in financial markets. Purchases of these securities began on January 5, 2009. Additional information on System transactions in mortgage-backed securities is available at www.newyorkfed.org/markets/mbs/.

  • Percent, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q1 1984 to Q3 2020 (2020-12-10)

    This series is discontinued and will no longer be updated. For alternative data in FRED similar to the discontinued series, see the FDIC Quarterly Banking Profile (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/release?rid=482). Additional consolidated data is available on the FDIC's Bank Data and Statistics (https://www.fdic.gov/bank/statistical/). This series is a ratio of Net Income call item RIAD4340 to Quarterly Average of Total Assets call item RCFD3368. Data are annualized. Users are advised to use the Federal Reserve Board of Governors' data dictionary (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/mdrm/data-dictionary) to retrieve detailed information for specific call items. This series is calculated by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis using raw data that are collected by the FFIEC. Raw data can be found at https://cdr.ffiec.gov/public/.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

  • Percent, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q4 1945 to Q4 2022 (Mar 9)

    Source ID: FL153064476.Q For more information about the Flow of Funds tables, see the Financial Accounts Guide (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/Default.aspx). With each quarterly release, the source may make major data and structural revisions to the series and tables. These changes are available in the Release Highlights (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/FOFHighlight.aspx). In the Financial Accounts, the source identifies each series by a string of patterned letters and numbers. For a detailed description, including how this series is constructed, see the series analyzer (https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof/SeriesAnalyzer.aspx?s=FL153064476&t=) provided by the source.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

  • Percent, Annual, Not Seasonally Adjusted 1998 to 2019 (2022-03-23)

    Ratio of bank capital and reserves to total assets. Capital and reserves include funds contributed by owners, retained earnings, general and special reserves, provisions, and valuation adjustments. Capital includes tier 1 capital (paid-up shares and common stock), which is a common feature in all countries' banking systems, and total regulatory capital, which includes several specified types of subordinated debt instruments that need not be repaid if the funds are required to maintain minimum capital levels (these comprise tier 2 and tier 3 capital). Total assets include all nonfinancial and financial assets. Ratio of bank capital and reserves to total assets. Capital and reserves include funds contributed by owners, retained earnings, general and special reserves, provisions, and valuation adjustments. Capital includes tier 1 capital (paid-up shares and common stock), which is a common feature in all countries' banking systems, and total regulatory capital, which includes several specified types of subordinated debt instruments that need not be repaid if the funds are required to maintain minimum capital levels (these comprise tier 2 and tier 3 capital). Total assets include all nonfinancial and financial assets. Reported by IMF staff. Note that due to differences in national accounting, taxation, and supervisory regimes, these data are not strictly comparable across countries. (International Monetary Fund, Global Financial Stability Report) Source Code: GFDD.SI.03

  • Billions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 1989-03-22 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The amount of securities held by Federal Reserve Banks. This quantity is the cumulative result of permanent open market operations: outright purchases or sales of securities, conducted by the Federal Reserve. Section 14 of the Federal Reserve Act defines the securities that the Federal Reserve is authorized to buy and sell.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    Reserve Bank credit is the sum of securities held outright, repurchase agreements, term auction credit, other loans, net portfolio holdings of Commercial Paper Funding Facility LLC, net portfolio holdings of LLCs funded through the Money Market Investor Funding Facility, net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane LLC, net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane II LLC, net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane III LLC, float, central bank liquidity swaps, and other Federal Reserve assets.

  • Billions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Seasonally Adjusted 1985-04-03 to 2023-03-15 (2 days ago)

    For further information, please refer to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System's H.8 release, online at http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h8/.

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The current face value of the Federal Reserve's outright holdings of Treasury bills.

  • Millions of Dollars, Quarterly, Not Seasonally Adjusted Q3 1989 to Q1 2022 (Jun 29)

    The Distributional Financial Accounts (DFAs) integrate two data products produced by the Federal Reserve Board: the Financial Accounts of the United States, which provide quarterly data on aggregate balance sheets of major sectors of the U.S. economy, and the Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF), which provides comprehensive triennial microdata on the assets and liabilities of a representative sample of U.S. households. Information on the data collection process can be found at the Board of Governors (https://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/efa/efa-distributional-financial-accounts.htm)."

  • Percent, Annual, Not Seasonally Adjusted 1960 to 2020 (2022-03-23)

    Ratio of central bank assets to GDP. Central bank assets are claims on domestic real nonfinancial sector by the Central Bank. Claims on domestic real nonfinancial sector by the Central Bank as a share of GDP, calculated using the following deflation method: {(0.5)*[Ft/P_et + Ft-1/P_et-1]}/[GDPt/P_at] where F is Central Bank claims, P_e is end-of period CPI, and P_a is average annual CPI. Raw data are from the electronic version of the IMF's International Financial Statistics. Central Bank claims (IFS lines 12, a-d); GDP in local currency (IFS line 99B..ZF or, if not available, line 99B.CZF); end-of period CPI (IFS line 64M..ZF or, if not available, 64Q..ZF); and annual CPI (IFS line 64..ZF). (International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics, and World Bank GDP estimates) Source Code: GFDD.DI.06

  • Percent, Annual, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2010 to 2019 (Aug 4)

    The ratio of the value of liquid assets (easily converted to cash) to short-term funding plus total deposits. Liquid assets include cash and due from banks, trading securities and at fair value through income, loans and advances to banks, reverse repos and cash collaterals. Deposits and short term funding includes total customer deposits (current, savings and term) and short term borrowing (money market instruments, CDs and other deposits). Raw data are from Bankscope. Data2075 / data2030. Numerator and denominator are first aggregated on the country level before division. (Calculated from underlying bank-by-bank unconsolidated data from Bankscope) Source Code: GFDD.SI.06

  • Millions of U.S. Dollars, Weekly, Not Seasonally Adjusted 2002-12-18 to 2023-03-22 (3 days ago)

    The gold certificate account reflects the receipts issued to the Reserve Banks by the Treasury against its gold holdings. In return, the Reserve Banks issue an equal value of credits to the general account of the Treasury, computed at the statutory price of $42.22 per troy ounce. Because nearly all of the gold held by the Treasury has been monetized in this fashion, the Federal Reserve Banks' gold certificate account of $11 billion represents the nation's entire official gold stock.


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