Release Highlights

Topic Description
Z.1 release tables renumbered Effective with this release, all Z.1 Financial Accounts of the United States release tables have been renumbered to more closely align with the System of National Accounts (SNA) classification hierarchies for sectors and instruments. Previously, tables used a sequential numeric system. The new numbering system utilizes recommended SNA alphanumeric codes (for example, table F.133 is now S2.t, and table L.133 is now S2.s). Adoption of the SNA table structure enhances the international comparability of the U.S. Financial Accounts and provides flexibility for future additions or removals of sectors or instruments. A CSV file with a complete table mapping of the previous table numbers to the new numbering system and a technical Q&A that provides additional details on the numbering system are available on the Z.1 Financial Accounts release page (https://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/z1/).
Federal funds and security repurchase agreements instrument reclassified The Federal funds and security repurchase agreements instrument (tables F4.1.t and F4.1.s) has been reclassified as a subcategory of total loans (tables F4.t and F4.s). Previously, federal funds and security repurchase agreements were classified as a separate, top-level instrument category.
Direct investment intercompany debt instrument shifted The direct investment intercompany debt instrument category (tables F89.2.t and F89.2.s) has been reordered within the financial accounts and is now grouped with taxes and miscellaneous assets. In the Integrated Macroeconomic Accounts (IMA) and international data submissions, direct investment intercompany debt has been reclassified from a subcategory of loans to a subcategory of other accounts payable excluding trade credit. This reclassification applies only to the IMA and international submissions; in the financial accounts, direct investment intercompany debt has been consistently classified as a separate instrument category.
Z.1 tables reordered The new table numbering system has changed the order of some tables within the release. The life insurance companies (tables S1281.t, S1281.s and subsectors), property-casualty insurance companies (tables S1282.1.t and S1282.1.s), and private and public pension fund sectors (tables S129.t, S129.s and subsectors) have been moved toward the end of the domestic sectors tables. Money market fund shares (tables F521.t and F521.s) have been moved to immediately precede mutual fund shares (tables F522.1.t and F522.1.s). The tables Derivation of measures of personal saving (S1P.t) and Assets and liabilities of the personal sector (S1P.s) have been moved from the summary section to the supplementary section. In the IMA, nonfinancial corporate business (table S11.1.i.a) now precedes nonfinancial noncorporate business (table S11.2.i.a).
Terminology change: Levels to stocks outstanding The terminology "levels" previously used to describe amounts outstanding of assets and liabilities at the end of the period has been replaced with "stocks outstanding" throughout the financial accounts. This change aligns with standard macroeconomic accounting terminology and affects table titles, series descriptions, and accompanying documentation.
Terminology change: Monetary authority to central bank The monetary authority sector has been renamed the central bank sector to align with SNA guidelines. The activities, assets, and liabilities of the central bank sector (tables S121.t and S121.s) exclude certain functions that would be consolidated within a monetary authority sector as defined by the SNA. These functions are performed by the federal government in the United States and are therefore recorded in the federal government sector in both the financial accounts and the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) produced by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).
Discontinued tables Several tables featuring data from the BEA's NIPA and Fixed Asset Accounts have been discontinued. The discontinued tables include: Distribution of gross domestic product (previously F.2), Distribution of national income (previously F.3), Saving and investment by sector (previously F.4), Net capital transfers (previously F.5), Gross fixed investment (previously F.4.g), Consumption of fixed capital (previously F.4.c), Net fixed investment (previously F.4.f), and Net stocks of fixed assets, current cost (previously L.4.s). All data series from these tables will continue to be updated and will remain available for download from the Federal Reserve Board's website.
Financial Accounts Guide Tables webpage discontinued The Financial Accounts Guide Tables webpage and associated HTML tables have been discontinued. HTML tables with direct links to Series Analyzer entries (data series documentation) and table descriptions are now available on the Z.1 Financial Accounts release page (https://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/z1/).

Explanatory Notes

Financial Accounts of the United States

The quarterly Statistical Release Z.1, "Financial Accounts of the United States," or Financial Accounts, is published about 10 weeks following the end of each calendar quarter and is organized into the following sections:

  • Matrices summarizing transactions and stocks outstanding across sectors, and tables on debt growth and net national wealth
  • Transactions in financial assets and liabilities, by sector and by financial instrument
  • Stocks outstanding of financial assets and liabilities, by sector and by financial instrument
  • Balance sheets, including nonfinancial assets, and changes in net worth for households and nonprofit organizations, nonfinancial corporate businesses, and nonfinancial noncorporate businesses
  • Supplementary balance sheet tables for the household sector, nonprofit organization sector, and the household and nonprofit organization sector with additional equity and debt security detail, and tables on savings and the personal sector
  • Integrated Macroeconomic Accounts (IMA)

The IMA relate production, income, saving, and capital formation from the Bureau of Economic Analysis's (BEA) national income and product accounts (NIPA) to changes in net worth from the Financial Accounts on a sector-by-sector basis. The IMA are published jointly by the Federal Reserve Board and the BEA and are based on international guidelines and terminology as defined in the System of National Accounts (SNA).

Federal Reserve Board staff have taken many steps over the past several years to conform the Financial Accounts with the SNA guidelines. Nonetheless, a few important differences remain, in particular, the following in the Financial Accounts:

  • The purchase of consumer durables is treated as investment rather than as consumption.
  • Nonfinancial noncorporate businesses (which are often small businesses) are shown in a separate sector rather than being included in the household sector.
  • Some debt securities are recorded at book value rather than market value.

Tables numbering structure

In the June 11, 2026, release of the Financial Accounts, tables were renumbered to align more closely with the SNA coding guidelines for sectors and instruments. This structure enhances the international comparability of the U.S. Financial Accounts and improves flexibility when sectors or instruments are added to or removed from the accounts.

Each table number follows a standardized structure:prefix + sector/instrument code + subsector detail (if applicable) + suffix

Prefixes identify the general category of table:

  • M - Matrix tables showing aggregated data across sectors

  • D - Debt tables

  • S - Sector tables (using SNA sector codes)

  • F - Financial instrument category tables (using SNA instrument codes)

The prefix is followed by an alphanumeric code corresponding to the SNA sector or instrument category. For matrix and debt tables showing combined domestic and foreign sectors, personal sector tables, and discrepancy tables, special Z.1 sector codes are used. When the Financial Accounts provide additional subsector or instrument detail beyond the SNA coding structure, a second alphanumeric code is included.

Suffixes indicate the table type:

  • t - Transactions

  • s - Stocks of assets or liabilities outstanding (previously called levels)

  • b - Balance sheets

  • r - Changes in net worth

  • g - Growth rates

  • e - Equity and debt detail

Special suffixes are used for specific table types:

  • i.a and i.q - Integrated Macroeconomic Accounts (IMA) annual and quarterly tables, respectively

  • t.c and s.c - Coded matrix tables for transactions and stocks outstanding, respectively

Example:Table S122.1.t reports transactions for U.S.-chartered depository institutions. In this table number, "S122" corresponds to SNA sector S122 (depository institutions), ".1" indicates this is the first of four depository institution subsectors presented in the Financial Accounts, and "t" denotes that the table reports transactions.

Concepts of Stocks and Transactions in the SNA and the Financial Accounts

The stock of an asset or liability (also referred to as the "level" or "stock outstanding") measures the value of the asset or liability in existence at a point in time. In the Financial Accounts, stocks are reported as of the end of each calendar quarter. In the SNA, the change in the stock from one period to the next is called the economic flow, and can be decomposed into three broad elements: transactions, which measure the exchange of assets; revaluations, which measure holding gains and losses; and other changes in volume, which measure discontinuities or breaks in time series due to disaster losses or a change in source data or definition. In practice, other volume changes are relatively rare, and revaluations occur only for series carried at market value (such as corporate equities and mutual fund shares), so for many series the change in the stock is equal to transactions.

Growth Rates

Growth rates calculated from stocks outstanding include revaluations and other changes in volume. In order to isolate the effect of transactions on growth of a given asset or liability, users should calculate the ratio of transactions in a given period to the stock outstanding in the preceding period. Growth rates in table D3.g are calculated by dividing transactions at a seasonally adjusted annual rate from table D3.t by seasonally adjusted stocks outstanding at the end of the previous period from table D3.s. Growth rates calculated from changes in unadjusted stocks may differ from those in table D3.g.

Seasonal Adjustment

Seasonal factors are recalculated and updated with the December release of third-quarter data. Series that exhibit significant seasonal patterns are adjusted. Seasonal factors are generated using the X-13-ARIMA seasonal adjustment program from the U.S. Census Bureau, estimated using the most recent 10 years of transaction data. Due to distortions of seasonal patterns caused by financial crises, seasonal factors for affected series are extrapolated using pre-crisis data until several years of post-crisis data are available. Seasonally adjusted stocks outstanding shown in table D.3 are derived by carrying forward year-end stocks by seasonally adjusted transactions.

Data Revisions

Data shown for the most recent quarters are based on preliminary and potentially incomplete information. A summary list of the most recent data available for each sector is provided in a table following these notes. Nonetheless, when source data are revised or estimation methods are improved, all data are subject to revision. There is no specific revision schedule; rather, data are revised on an ongoing basis. In each release of the Financial Accounts, major revisions are highlighted at the beginning of the publication.

Discrepancies

The data in the Financial Accounts come from a large variety of sources and are subject to limitations and uncertainty due to measurement errors, missing information, and incompatibilities among data sources. The size of this uncertainty cannot be quantified, but its existence is acknowledged by the inclusion of "statistical discrepancies" for various sectors and financial instruments.

The discrepancy for a given sector is defined as the difference between the aggregate value of the sector's sources of funds and the value of its uses of funds. Sources of funds are gross savings less net capital transfers paid and net increase in liabilities; uses of funds are capital expenditures and the net acquisition of financial assets. If a sector's sources of funds are greater than its uses of funds, the sector is a net lender of funds in the accounts. In the reverse case, the sector would be a net borrower of funds. Most of the data for deriving gross savings come from the BEA's NIPA. For a financial instrument category, the discrepancy is defined as the difference between the measurement of funds raised through the financial instrument and funds disbursed through that instrument. The relative size of the statistical discrepancy is one indication of the quality of the underlying source data. Note that differences in seasonal adjustment procedures sometimes result in quarterly discrepancies that partially or completely offset each other in the annual data.

Financial Accounts Guide

Substantially more detail on the construction of the Financial Accounts is available in the Financial Accounts Guide, which provides interactive, online documentation for each data series. The tools and descriptions in the guide are designed to help users understand the structure and content of the Financial Accounts.

Each input and calculated series in the Z.1 is identified according to a unique string of patterned numbers and letters. The series structure page of the guide provides a breakdown of what the letters and numbers represent in the series mnemonics. Some data submissions to international organizations are also available in the guide. The guide is updated with the quarterly release and is available online:

www.federalreserve.gov/apps/fof

Enhanced Financial Accounts and Data Visualization

Additional supplementary information is available online in the Enhanced Financial Accounts, which augment the Financial Accounts with finer detail, additional types of activities, higher-frequency data, and more-disaggregated data. Links to the Enhanced Financial Accounts are available from both the Financial Accounts Guide page and the main release page. In addition, interactive online data visualizations are available for selected components of the Financial Accounts and Enhanced Financial Accounts. Links are available also on the same pages.

Publication webpage

The publication and instructions for downloading the data are available at: www.federalreserve.gov/releases/Z1.

Description of Most Recent Data Available

National income and product accounts (NIPA) (various tables)

Second estimate, seasonally adjusted, for 2026:Q1. Corporate profits through 2026:Q1 (preliminary). Government receipts and expenditures unadjusted transactions from 1952:Q1 forward. GDP and income unadjusted transactions from 2002:Q1 forward. Many BEA series are downloaded via Haver Analytics.

Households and nonprofit organizations sector (tables S1M.t and S1M.s)

Estimates are largely residual, derived from other sectors' data. Data for consumer credit, which are estimated directly, are available through 2026:Q1. Internal Revenue Service Statistics of Income (IRS/SOI) data for Section 501(c)(3-9) nonprofit organizations through 2022, and private foundations and Section 4947(a)(1) Charitable Trusts Treated as Foundations are available through 2021 (table S15.b). Data on hedge funds from SEC forms PF and ADV through 2025:Q4 (table S124.7.b).

Nonfinancial corporate business (tables S11.1.t and S11.1.s)

Quarterly Financial Report (QFR) of the Census Bureau through 2026:Q1; IRS/SOI data through 2023. Securities offerings, mortgages, bank loans, commercial paper, and other loans through 2026:Q1. Corporate farm data through 2024; USDA forecast through 2026:Q1. Equity real estate investment trusts (eREITs) through 2026:Q1.

Nonfinancial noncorporate business (tables S11.2.t and S11.2.s)

IRS/SOI data through 2023; bank and finance company loans, and mortgage borrowing through 2026:Q1. Noncorporate farm data through 2024; USDA forecast through 2026:Q1.

Federal government (tables S1311.t and S1311.s)

Monthly Treasury Statement of Receipts and Outlays, Monthly Statement of the Public Debt, and Loan program data through 2026:Q1.

State and local governments (tables S13M.t and S13M.s)

Gross offerings and retirements of municipal securities, deposits at banks, and nonmarketable U.S. government security issues through 2026:Q1. Data for total financial assets from Census Bureau through 2021:Q2. Additional financial asset detail from comprehensive annual financial reports of state and local governments through 2019:Q2.

Central bank (tables S121.t and S121.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

U.S.-chartered depository institutions (tables S122.1.t and S122.1.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Foreign banking offices in U.S. (tables S122.2.t and S122.2.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Banks in U.S.-affiliated areas (tables S122.3.t and S122.3.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Credit unions (tables S122.4.t and S122.4.s)

America's Credit Unions through 2026:Q1; Natural person Call Reports and corporate Call Reports through 2025:Q4.

Money market funds (tables S123.t and S123.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Mutual funds (tables S124.1.t and S124.1.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Closed-end funds (tables S124.2.t and S124.2.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Exchange-traded funds (tables S124.3.t and S124.3.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Mortage real estate investment trusts (mREITs) (tables S124.4.t and S124.4.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) (tables S125s1.1.t and S125s1.1.s)

Data for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, REFCORP, Farmer Mac, FCS, and FHLB through 2026:Q1.

Agency- and GSE-backed mortgage pools (tables S125s1.2.t and S125s1.2.s)

Data for Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, Farmer Mac, and Ginnie Mae through 2026:Q1.

Issuers of asset-backed securities (ABS) (tables S125s1.3.t and S125s1.3.s)

All data for private mortgage pools, consumer credit, business loans and trade credit securitization through 2026:Q1.

Finance companies (tables S125s2.1.t and S125s2.1.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Security brokers and dealers (tables S125s3.t and S125s3.s)

FOCUS reports through 2026:Q1. There are no FOGS filers as of 2023:Q4.

Holding companies (table S127.1.t and S127.1.s)

All data through 2026:Q1.

Other financial business (tables S127.2.t and S127.2.s)

Estimates are largely residual, derived from other sectors' data. Data for central clearing counterparties are available annually through 2025:Q4 and partial quarterly data through 2026:Q1.

Life insurance companies (tables S1281.t and S1281.s)

All data through 2026:Q1 (NJ-domiciled firms extrapolated).

Property-casualty insurance companies (tables S1282.1.t and S1282.1.s)

All data through 2026:Q1 (NJ-domiciled firms extrapolated).

Private pension funds (tables S129.1.t and S129.1.s)

Internal Revenue Service/Department of Labor Form 5500 data through 2023. Investment Company Institute data through 2025:Q4. BEA annual actuarial liability data through 2024:Q4.

Federal government retirement funds (tables S129.2.t and S129.2.s)

Data from the Monthly Treasury Statement of Receipts and Outlays, the Thrift Savings Plan, and the National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust through 2026:Q1. BEA annual actuarial liability data through 2024:Q4.

State and local government employee retirement funds (tables S129.3.t and S129.3.s)

Census Bureau Annual Survey of Public Pensions through 2024:Q2. Quarterly Survey of Public Pensions through 2025:Q4. Investment Company Institute data through 2025:Q4. BEA annual actuarial liability data through 2024:Q4.

Rest of the world (tables S2.t and S2.s)

NIPA estimates, depository institutions' Call Reports, and Treasury International Capital System through 2026:Q1. International investment position and international transaction accounts through 2025:Q4.

 

Last Update: June 11, 2026