By Pam Martens: December 9, 2013
The Federal Reserve will celebrate its 100th anniversary
on December 23 of this year. But the Federal Reserve did not function as
the nation’s central bank until 1922 when it fumbled and stumbled its
way into an awareness of the power of a centralized mechanism for buying
and selling U.S. government securities as a means of carrying out
monetary policy. Thanks to a trove of historic documents recently
released by the St. Louis Fed, we are now able to see how the New York
Fed, a bastion of Wall Street interests, maneuvered itself into control
of that process.
Incredibly, from its legislative creation in 1913 until 1922, the
Federal Reserve had 12 separate “central” banks carrying out monetary
policy for their region of the country. Each of the 12 regional Federal
Reserve banks was allowed to buy and sell government securities and
trade acceptances. The tide turned in 1922 when the regional banks, to
compensate for a dramatic loss of earnings from loans, began
independently buying up hundreds of millions of dollars of U.S.
government securities to shore up their earnings in order to pay the
mandated 6 percent annual dividend to their member bank shareholders,
making a dramatic and noticeable impact on the money markets in New
York.
At a conference of the regional Federal Reserve banks on May 6, 1922,
the powerful head of the New York Fed, Benjamin Strong Jr., became the
first Chairman of the body that is now known as the Federal Open Market
Committee. At the time, it was given the name: Committee on Centralized
Execution of Purchases and Sales of Government Securities by Federal
Reserve Banks. Strong, through force of personality, began to channel
all trading of U.S. government securities through the New York Fed.
Denoting where power rested in the Federal Reserve System of 1922, on
May 25, 1922, George Harrison, second in command at the New York Fed,
wrote to the heads of the other regional Federal Reserve banks, advising
them that: “Governor Strong has today suggested that Mr. Matteson of
this bank act as the operating secretary of the [open market] committee,
and has advised each of the banks by telegram that if there is no
objection to that appointment the committee will commence functioning
tomorrow.” The letter further notes that “This whole program was
reported to the Federal Reserve Board at the luncheon…”
A matter as critical as the first functioning of central bank open
market operations is being “reported” to the Federal Reserve Board over
lunch, much as someone might whisper gossip between “pass the butter”
and “where’s the salt.”
Not all of the regional banks were willing to be dictated to by the
New York Fed. Ten months later, while Strong was out on sick leave, the
Federal Reserve Board stepped into the fray on March 22, 1923 with a
Resolution which read in part:
“Whereas the Federal Reserve Board, under the powers given it in
Sections 13 and 14 of the Federal Reserve Act, has authority to limit
and otherwise determine the securities and investments purchased by
Federal reserve banks; Whereas the Federal Reserve Board has never
prescribed any limitation upon open market purchases by Federal reserve
banks; Whereas the amount, time, character, and manner of such
purchases may exercise an important influence upon the money market;
Whereas an open market investment policy for the twelve banks composing
the Federal reserve system is necessary in the interest of the
maintenance of a good relationship between the discount and purchase
operations of the Federal reserve banks and the general money market;
Whereas heavy investments in United States securities, particularly
short-dated certificate issues, have occasioned embarrassment to the
Treasury in ascertaining the true condition of the money and investment
markets from time to time…”
The Resolution ended by disbanding Strong’s Committee and created a
new body, the Open Market Investment Committee for the Federal Reserve
System, consisting of representatives from five regional Fed banks and
“under the general supervision of the Federal Reserve Board.” (Prior to
the Banking Act of 1935, the “Governors” of the Federal Reserve were the
heads of each of the 12 regional Federal Reserve banks while the title
of the individuals serving on the Federal Reserve Board in Washington,
D.C. was “members.”
In the early formative years of the Federal Reserve System, Strong
functioned much as Ben Bernanke functions today – as the pivotal mover
and shaker. Strong came from Wall Street and headed the New York Fed
from its very first Board meeting on October 5, 1914 to his death in
October 1928. Strong was one of the attendees of the infamous meeting on
Jekyll Island where Wall Street power brokers designed the Federal
Reserve system.
During Strong’s 14 years in office, he traveled abroad, hobnobbing
with foreign central bankers and holding the reins on open market
operations at the New York Fed.
By 1936, the New York Fed was still attempting to write itself into
the formalized role as the sole regional Fed bank authorized to carry
out open market operations on behalf of the Federal Reserve System. In
the March 16, 1936 Proposed Regulations of the Open Market Operations of the Federal Reserve by
the staff of the Federal Reserve Board, the Board had deleted the
proposed language (see page 6; second paragraph) denoting the New York
Fed as the bank authorized to carry out open market operations and
inserting corrected wording: “The purchase or sale of obligations for
the system open market account shall be executed by a Federal Reserve
bank selected by the Committee.”
The final published Regulations dated March 19, 1936 carried this
wording: “Transactions for the System Open Market Account shall be
executed by a Federal Reserve bank selected by the Committee. Each
Federal Reserve bank shall make available to the Federal Reserve bank
selected by the Committee such funds as may be necessary to conduct and
effectuate such transactions.”
Today, even Benjamin Strong would be shocked at the power
concentrated at the New York Fed. The New York Fed is the only one of
the 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks to have a Wall Street-syle trading floor with
Bloomberg terminals and speed dials to the biggest firms on Wall
Street. Since 1935, all open market operations of the entire Federal
Reserve system have been carried out by the New York Fed.
On its web site, the New York Fed explains its unique role as the
central bank’s central bank: It is the sole manager of the System Open
Market Account (SOMA) and sole regional bank engaged in open market
operations; it is “responsible for intervening in foreign exchange
markets to achieve dollar exchange rate policy objectives.” It stores
“monetary gold for foreign central banks, government and international
agencies.” Despite being the regulator in charge of the largest Wall
Street banks at the time that obscene levels of leverage and corruption
collapsed the financial system of the United States in 2008, even while top Wall Street CEOs sat on its Board of Directors, the New York Fed continues to be in charge of placing examiners in these banks and functioning as their regulator.
The New York Fed also “acts as fiscal agent to the U.S. Treasury by
providing settlement services in support of government securities
auctions.”
The fact that the New York Fed needs the goodwill of the major Wall
Street banks to carry out its open market operations and to facilitate
the orderly functioning of U.S. Treasury auctions, makes it a highly
inappropriate regulator of the same firms, in the opinion of many
observers.
On November 12, Senator Elizabeth Warren delivered a speech on the
continuing, inherent dangers on Wall Street. She told her audience:
“Who would have thought five years ago, after we witnessed firsthand
the dangers of an overly concentrated financial system, that the Too Big
to Fail problem would only have gotten worse? There are many who say,
‘Sure, Too Big to Fail isn’t over yet, but Congress should wait to act
further because the agencies still have to issue a bunch of Dodd-Frank’s
required rules.’ True, there are rules left to be written, but that’s
because the agencies have missed more than 60 percent of Dodd-Frank’s
rulemaking deadlines. I don’t understand the logic. Since when does
Congress set deadlines, watch regulators miss most of them, and then
take that failure as a reason not to act? I thought that if the
regulators failed, it was time for Congress to step in. That’s what
oversight means. And that’s certainly a principle that would have
served our country well prior to the crisis.”
If Congress ever decides to get serious about preventing the next
crash of the financial system, there is no better place to start than
the New York Fed.
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