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I think you'll find this video exciting because until now,
we've just been talking about the Federal reserve in the
abstract and I was drawing little boxes to represent
balance sheets, but this is the actual Federal reserve
balance sheet and I took a date that was before all of
this silliness started happening in the banking
sector just so we could kind of see what a Federal reserve
balance would've looked like in a normal environment.
And then we can actually, in future videos, compare what
they've done since then and then we can get a better
insight into all of the different machinations that
the Federal reserve has done to kind of try to keep banks
liquid and solvent and to keep everything going.
And we can debate whether they've been good or bad or
they're just keeping banks in kind of zombie mode.
But anyway, this is the Federal reserve's balance
sheet as of February 14th, 2007.
So before all the craziness happened, although a little
bit started-- this is before the Feds started taking really
aggressive action to provide liquidity for the markets.
But here the assets.
So first of all, we have the total assets number.
That's just interesting to look at.
These are all in millions.
So this is $871 billion of assets.
Let's just get the big picture.
Let me draw that here in our traditional box diagram.
So if I were to draw the assets-- the sum of all the
assets over here is $871 billion, and we know that the
liabilities plus equity better add up to $871 billion.
Let's see.
What's the total liabilities?
Total liabilities is $839 billion-- so
give or take $840.
So the liabilities-- I'll do it in a different color.
The liabilities are $840 billion, give or
take a little bit.
They should have the same width, not that the width
matters that much.
And then whatever's left over should be equity, right?
Assets minus liabilities.
What you have minus what you owe is what you're left with
for the owners.
And of course, owners of the Federal reserve, you kind of
have to take with a grain of salt.
They really don't have the upside of traditional owners.
They're really just kind of stakeholders.
What's left over is the equity.
It should be roughly $31 billion.
And let's confirm that by looking at the
actual balance sheet.
And here we have it-- total capital is $31 billion.
So big picture, so far it's kind of meeting up with how
we've envisioned a Federal reserve balance sheet, but
let's dig a little deeper and see if we can find interesting
things and things we've talked about.
And hopefully at this point, we should actually
understand all of it.
Let's focus on the assets for now.
So the assets are just this part of it.
OK.
So it has-- this is what?
This is $11 billion of gold certificate accounts and
that's some type of rights on gold.
Let's see.
Gold certificate accounts.
Let's see if they have any other gold anywhere.
Coin-- $1 billion.
But this is all small potatoes, right?
I don't know what special drawing rights certificate
account is, but it's very small relative to
the big pie, right?
There's $871 billion of assets.
This is just kind of almost rounding-off error.
Here we have a big chunk of something.
Actually, I think this $11 billion is actual gold because
I don't see it anywhere else on their assets.
So I think if you combine roughly-- I don't know what
this thing here is, but if you combine this and this, it's
saying that the Federal reserve is-- because I don't
see gold anywhere else here-- that it's holding roughly $12
billion worth of gold, which really isn't a lot of gold
when you consider the total size of its balance sheet.
The big piece right here-- let me pick a different color.
I'll do it in the purple.
It has securities, repurchase agreements, and loans-- $808
billion-- almost $809 billion.
So this is a big piece of the Fed's balance sheet.
Out of the whole $871, $808.
So pretty much it's almost like that much of it.
Actually, maybe a little bit less of that-- are these
securities and things like that.
Let's see what kind of securities they have. And they
break them down.
So this $808 billion is made up of these things right here.
The bulk of them are U.S. treasury loans, right?
So these are going to be bills, notes, and bonds-- OK.
So just to explain, a treasury bill-- and I've done videos on
this-- this is essentially a loan to the government for a
year or less.
So it's just a loan to the government that matures in a
year or in three months.
Notes and bonds-- these are loans to the U.S. treasury
that have longer maturities.
Notes are up to 10 years.
Bonds are more than 10 years.
And then inflation index bonds-- I'll do a whole video
on that in the future, but these are essentially
treasuries that are indexed to inflation so you can kind of
hedge out a little bit of your inflation risk.
But, needless to say, the big picture is is that $780
billion of the Fed's assets are treasuries, loans to the
Federal government.
Let me draw that here.
So a pretty big piece, roughly that much is treasury.
So most of what the Federal reserve owns are treasuries.
And that's consistent with everything we've gone over so
far and that account for everything up to here.
And then what's interesting-- what we just talked about--
repurchase agreements, $30 billion.
And I don't know 100%, but I'm guessing that these are--
someone came to the discount window and essentially
borrowed $30 billion from the Fed-- and
it's not just someone.
It's probably multiple people came and borrowed $30 billion
from the Fed-- and they gave treasuries as collateral, but
as we know, just the way repurchase agreements work,
they actually kind of sold the treasuries to the Fed and the
Fed agreed to buy it later, but it's essentially
collateral.
So these repurchase agreements-- they're included
in these securities because they're not
just agreements, right?
They actually are-- they're probably treasuries or they
might be other types of highly rated securities and we'll
learn in future videos that the Fed has lowered its
standards over the last year in terms of what type of
collateral or what type of securities it's willing to
trade in these repurchase agreements, but in the
situation it looks like about $30 billion.
And you can also-- you get a clue of what repurchase
agreements are because here, they say securities held
outright, right?
So there's no repurchase agreement.
There's not some contract where they say they're going
to sell this to someone else at another price.
These are repurchase agreements.
These are kind of more collateral for loans.
And then they have outright loans-- $39 million.
That's pretty much peanuts in the Federal reserve world.
So the bulk is treasuries, a little bit of repurchase
agreements, and then there's other assets.
They don't break out what this is.
Maybe there's some gold in that.
I'm not sure.
Bank premises, the buildings of the Federal reserve are
worth $2 billion.
I mean, they have 12 banks around the country and I'm
sure they have a bunch of other things.
And then items in process collection.
I don't know what these things are, but these
are all small potatoes.
The big thing is that the Federal reserve's assets are
predominantly U.S. treasuries-- at least, they're
predominantly treasuries right now.
Now let's look at the liabilities.
And to some degree, this is much more interesting.
So Federal reserve notes, net of Federal
reserve bank holdings.
So $769 billion.
So when I talked about notes outstanding,
that's what this is.
These are Federal reserve notes that have been printed
and they're liabilities, right?
Because the Federal reserve bank printed these notes and
then used them as currency and so they're liabilities now
because someone can come back another time and say, hey,
give me back the value of these things and that's a bit
of an abstract concept, but roughly $700 something of this
are notes outstanding.
This is money that the Federal reserve had printed.
And then there's some reverse repurchase agreements, which
essentially-- see for some reason, the Federal reserve
used repurchase agreements to borrow from someone else.
It has a little bit of deposits, right?
And these deposits have actually grown dramatically in
the past year.
Has $22 billion of deposits.
So these are actually deposits that banks are keeping with
the Federal reserve.
The U.S. treasury actually keeps some money there.
Depository institutions have $17 billion-- and actually,
that's how the Federal reserve traditionally
has paid its expenses.
People put deposits with the Federal reserve-- so let's say
these are deposits from banks.
It's a very small piece.
It's like $17 billion.
These could be deposits from member banks, but the Federal
reserve does not pay interest in these deposits.
They don't pay interest on these deposits and then they
can take these deposits and by treasuries or other securities
and get interest on them.
So they're essentially getting free interest and that's what
they used actually to fund their operations.
Any excess after funding their operations goes back to the
U.S. Treasury so it's not like Ben Bernanke can fly around or
drive a Bentley or something.
And then I don't know what this is-- foreign official--
these are nothing items. So the bulk of it is money that
had been printed and that's a liability of the Federal
reserve now.
And then there's a little bit of deposits from depository
institutions.
And the treasury has kept some money with the
Federal reserve as well.
And then everything left over is the equity.
Anyway, I thought that would be pretty neat to see that you
can actually look at what the Federal reserve's balance
sheet is right now.
You can actually just do a web search for it.
You'll find it in a bunch of different sources.
And you can actually analyze it.
You now have the tools to look at that and make sense of it.
And what's even more interesting is to compare this
balance sheet with the current Federal reserve balance sheet
and then you can know everything that
they've been up to.