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System Open Market Account

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The System Open Market Account (SOMA) is a securities portfolio managed by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, that holds the assets it has purchased through open market operations (OMOs) in the course of carrying out monetary policy. Through SOMA transactions, the Federal Reserve System influences interest rates and the amount of reserves in the US banking system.[1] Income from SOMA assets also provides funding for the Federal Reserve's activities, which are not funded by Congress. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) instructs the Reserve Bank of New York as to how it should use the SOMA to support monetary policy.

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Transcription

Purpose

SOMA's primary purpose is to assist the New York Fed in carrying out open market operations (OMOs) and foreign exchange interventions (the U.S. Treasury, in consultation with the Federal Reserve System, is responsible for setting U.S. exchange rate policy). The U.S. monetary authorities—the Treasury and the Fed—may intervene in the foreign exchange market to counter disorderly market conditions, using funds that belong to the Federal Reserve and to the Exchange Stabilization Fund (ESF) of the Treasury Department.

Following the global financial crisis of 2007-2008 leading to the Great Recession, the FOMC "increased the size and adjusted the composition of the SOMA portfolio in efforts to promote the Committee’s mandate to foster maximum employment and price stability".[2]

SOMA securities serve three purposes:[1]

SOMA portfolio

The resulting investments are held in the SOMA portfolio. Interest on the portfolio provides virtually all of the Fed's income, but the central bank buys and sells securities purely to implement U.S. monetary policy and not for profit.

The SOMA consists of the Federal Reserve's domestic and foreign portfolios. As of the end of 2008, the domestic portfolio consisted of U.S. Treasury securities held $496 billion in securities outright and $80 billion in repurchase agreements (i.e., on a temporary basis). The SOMA foreign currency portfolio consisted of $25 billion denominated in euros and yen. Reciprocal currency arrangements with foreign institutions totaled $554 billion.[3]

Ownership of the SOMA and its income is allocated among the Reserve Banks during the system's annual settlement of balances. The settlement process makes use of the system's gold certificates that, despite the abandonment of the gold standard in the 20th century, still have a nominal role in backing US currency. Ownership of the foreign portfolio is determined first by allocating each Reserve Bank a share in proportion to its year-end capital and surplus. The change in its ownership from the previous allocation is offset with an adjustment to the Reserve Bank's clearing balance with the rest of the system. Next, each Reserve Bank calculates its average daily clearing balance during the past year. It adjusts its ownership of the gold certificates by that amount and makes an offsetting adjustment to its current clearing balance. Finally, each Reserve Bank adjusts its gold certificate ownership again so that the ratio of its ownership to its outstanding Federal Reserve Notes matches the systemwide ratio, and makes an offsetting adjustment to its ownership of the domestic portfolio. The resulting ownership percentages are then effective for the following year.[4]

The New York Fed has an open data web page that allows people to export historical data of SOMA holdings from 2003 to the present as a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. SOMA holdings data is updated weekly.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c "System Open Market Account Holdings". Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  2. ^ Alyssa Cambron; Michael Fleming; Deborah Leonard; Grant Long; Julie Remache (April 17, 2014). "The 2013 Federal Reserve's System Open Market Account (SOMA) Annual Report in a Historical Context". Econintersect.
  3. ^ "What We Do: System Open Market Account (updated March 2009)". Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  4. ^ Wolman, Alexander L. (2013). "Federal Reserve Interdistrict Settlement" (PDF). Economic Quarterly. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. 99 (2). Retrieved 2022-07-23.
This page was last edited on 4 July 2023, at 00:55
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