Great Graphic: Sticky Pass Through

The Fed funds target rate has risen,
but the rate of the average yield of the certificate of deposit has not risen.
 
It is at 25 bp, an increase of five basis points over the past four years.  Goldstein documents other evidence
that the pass-through of tighter Fed
policy has been limited.  The FDIC
reports that the national aver for non-jumbo savings accounts (less than $100k)
was six basis points in May, and four basis points on interest-bearing checking accounts.  A five-year CD gets about
80 bp.  

Goldstein points to the implication of the limited pass-through is on bank profitability. 
US bank profits were $44 bln in Q1 17.  Owing
a large part to net interest income
, profits rose 12.7% from Q1
16.  The FDIC reports that only 4.1% of US banks were not profitable. 

In effect, the bank could take the
$10,000 for the CD and bring the money to the Federal Reserve.  The Fed
pays interest on all bank reserves.
  The interest rate is set at the top end of the Fed funds range. Currently, it is paying 1.0%, and assuming a
rate hike later today; it will be paying
1.25% starting tomorrow.   During the financial crisis, as banks
scrambled to repair their balance sheets, they paid up for securing funding, as
in CDs.  

The chart illustrates the variable lag and lead times of monetary policy
how it passes from the banks to the broader economy.
  This is only part of the process.  The
limited or slow pass through effects the behavior of savers.  There has
been strong retail demand for US fixed income funds.  It appears that households
are taking part of their savings and using a bond fund as an alternative to
cash.  This may be helping to keep
US interest rates low and financial conditions looser.  



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