The Federal Reserve, the central bank of the United States, provides the nation with a safe, flexible, and stable monetary and financial system.
Federal Open Market Committee
Monetary Policy Principles and Practice
Policy Implementation
Reports
Review of Monetary Policy Strategy, Tools, and Communications
Supervision
Reporting Forms
Legal Developments
Mergers, Acquisitions, and Other Applications
Supervision and Regulation Letters
Regulatory and Policy Resources
Banking and Data Structure
Financial Stability Assessments
Financial Stability Coordination & Actions
Regulations & Statutes
Payment Policies
Reserve Bank Payment Services & Data
Financial Market Utilities & Infrastructures
Research, Reports, & Committees
Working Papers and Notes
Data, Models and Tools
Bank Assets and Liabilities
Bank Structure Data
Business Finance
Dealer Financing Terms
Exchange Rates and International Data
Financial Accounts
Household Finance
Industrial Activity
Interest Rates
Micro Data Reference Manual (MDRM)
Money Stock and Reserve Balances
Other
Regulations
Supervision & Enforcement
Community Development
Research & Analysis
Resources for Consumers
Add to Clipboard
Stocks outstanding calculated as the sum of financial business sector nonresidential equipment (sum of FOF series FL765013265, FL755013265, FL735013265, FL745013265, FL475013265, FL545013265, FL575013265, FL515013265, FL615013263, FL125013265, FL665013265, FL225013265, FL405013265, and FL715013265). Transacations are calculated as gross fixed investment (FOF series FA795013025) less consumption of fixed capital (FOF series FA796330025). Other volume changes are from unpublished BEA data on financial business disaster losses on nonresidential equipment (a portion of NIPA, Table 5.1 Saving and Investment by Sector, line 60, Disaster losses, Domestic business), with opposite sign. Capital gains are equal to the change in stocks outstanding, less the quarterly transactions, less other volume changes.