I seem to be harping on this. But the latest Fed H3 statistics are out:
Released Oct 23, 2008:
Numbers for Oct 22 (provisional) indicate the monetary base expanded to 1,143,873 million dollars. The monetary base has been around 820 billion for a long time. This is up 16% from 984,712 million on Oct 8 (126% annualized),
No major changes in non-borrowed reserves (Sept 24: -158,343 million, Oct 8: -363,145, Oct 22: -362,550).
This jump in the monetary base is quite significant. Updated charts on FRED, the BASENS series:
or, as year-on-year change:
The other, longer-term monetary base series are updated monthly and go back to before 1940. Let's just say that this rate of expansion in the monetary base hasn't been seen since the 1930s and 40s.
Released Oct 23, 2008:
Numbers for Oct 22 (provisional) indicate the monetary base expanded to 1,143,873 million dollars. The monetary base has been around 820 billion for a long time. This is up 16% from 984,712 million on Oct 8 (126% annualized),
No major changes in non-borrowed reserves (Sept 24: -158,343 million, Oct 8: -363,145, Oct 22: -362,550).
This jump in the monetary base is quite significant. Updated charts on FRED, the BASENS series:
or, as year-on-year change:
The other, longer-term monetary base series are updated monthly and go back to before 1940. Let's just say that this rate of expansion in the monetary base hasn't been seen since the 1930s and 40s.
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