Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC): What It Is and Does

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Part of the Series Understanding the Role of the Fed
  1. Federal Reserve System: What It Is and How It Works
  2. Central Bank
  3. Central Banks and Interest Rates
  4. Financial Regulators
  5. Who Determines Interest Rates?
  6. Monetary Policy vs. Fiscal Policy

Introduction to the Fed

  1. 1913 Federal Reserve Act
  2. How the Federal Reserve was Formed
  3. Federal Reserve Board
  4. Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
CURRENT ARTICLE

The Fed's Roles and Functions

  1. What Do the Federal Reserve Banks Do?
  2. The Federal Reserve Chair's Responsibilities
  3. How the Federal Reserve Creates Money
  4. Federal Reserve Balance Sheet
  5. Reserve Requirements
  6. Reserve Ratio Definition
  7. Interest Rate Cuts and Consumers
  8. Fed Fund Rate Hikes and the US Dollar
  9. Open Market Operations
  10. Tight Monetary Policy
  11. Expansionary Policy
  12. Taylor's Rule

Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC): The branch of the Federal Reserve System that determines the direction of monetary policy.

What Is the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)?

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is the branch of the Federal Reserve System (FRS) that determines the direction of monetary policy in the United States by directing open market operations (OMOs). The committee is made up of 12 members, including seven members of the Board of Governors, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and four of the remaining 11 Reserve Bank presidents, who serve on a rotating basis.

Key Takeaways

Understanding the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)

The 12 members of the FOMC meet eight times a year to discuss whether there should be any changes to near-term monetary policy. A vote to change policy would result in either buying or selling U.S. government securities on the open market to promote the healthy growth of the national economy. Committee members are typically categorized as hawks favoring tighter monetary policies, doves who favor stimulus, or centrists/moderates who are somewhere in between.

The FOMC chair is also the chair of the Board of Governors. The current makeup of the board is as follows:

There are 12 Federal Reserve districts, each with its own Federal Reserve Bank. These regional banks operate as extensions of the central bank. The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York serves continuously while the presidents of the others serve one-year terms on a three-year rotating schedule (except for Cleveland and Chicago, which rotate on a two-year basis).

The one-year rotating seats of the FOMC are always comprised of one Reserve Bank president from each of the following groups:

The geographic group system helps ensure that all regions of the United States receive fair representation. Here are the 2024 FOMC members:

Current FOMC Members
Name Position
Jerome Powell Chair of the Federal Reserve Board
John Williams Vice-Chair of the Federal Reserve Board
Thomas Barkin President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Michael Barr Member of the Federal Reserve Board
Raphael Bostic President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Michelle Bowman Member of the Federal Reserve Board
Lisa Cook Member of the Federal Reserve Board
Mary Daly President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Philip Jefferson Member of the Federal Reserve Board
Adriana Kugler Member of the Federal Reserve Board
Christopher Waller Member of the Federal Reserve Board

Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Meetings

The FOMC has eight regularly scheduled meetings each year, but they can meet more often if the need should arise. The meetings are not held in public and are therefore the subject of much speculation on Wall Street, as analysts attempt to predict whether the Fed will tighten or loosen the money supply with a resulting increase or decrease in interest rates.

In recent years, FOMC meeting minutes have been made public following the meetings. When it is reported in the news that the Fed changed interest rates, it is the result of the FOMC's regular meetings.

During the meeting, members discuss developments in the local and global financial markets, as well as economic and financial forecasts. All participants—the Board of Governors and all 12 Reserve Bank presidents—share their views on the country’s economic stance and converse on the monetary policy that would be most beneficial for the country. After much deliberation by all participants, only designated FOMC members get to vote on a policy that they consider appropriate for the period.

At the July 2023 FOMC meeting, the committee raised the fed funds rate to a target between 5.25% and 5.50%. This was an increase of 25 basis points from the last increase in May 2023. At subsequent meetings, the committee kept the target rate at the same level and confirmed the rate as of the last meeting, which was on June 12, 2024.

Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Operations

The Federal Reserve possesses the tools necessary to increase or decrease the money supply. This is done through OMOs, adjusting the discount rate, and setting bank reserve requirements. The Fed's Board of Governors is in charge of setting the discount rate and reserve requirements, while the FOMC is specifically in charge of OMOs, which entails buying and selling government securities. For example, to tighten the money supply and decrease the amount of money available in the banking system, the Fed would offer government securities for sale.

Securities bought by the FOMC are deposited in the Fed's System Open Market Account (SOMA), which consists of a domestic and a foreign portfolio. The domestic portfolio holds U.S. Treasuries and federal agency securities, while the foreign portfolio holds investments denominated in euros and Japanese yen.

The FOMC can hold these securities until maturity or sell them when they see fit, as granted by the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 and the Monetary Control Act of 1980. A percentage of the Fed's SOMA holdings are held in each of the 12 regional Reserve Banks; however, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York executes all of the Fed's open market transactions.

The process begins with the results of the meeting being communicated to the SOMA manager, who relays them to the trading desk at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which then conducts transactions of government securities on the open market until the FOMC mandate is met.

The interaction of all of the Fed's policy tools determines the federal funds rate or the rate at which depository institutions lend their balances at the Federal Reserve to each other on an overnight basis. The federal funds rate, in turn, directly influences other short-term rates and indirectly influences long-term interest rates; foreign exchange rates, and the supply of credit and demand for investment, employment, and economic output.

Special Considerations

On Jan. 30, 2024, the FOMC reaffirmed its "Statement of Longer-Run Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy."

This statement is based on the FOMC's commitment to fulfilling a statutory mandate from Congress to promote maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates. Because monetary policy determines the inflation rate over the long term, the FOMC can specify a longer-run goal for inflation. In the statement, the FOMC reaffirmed its analysis that a 2% target inflation rate was the rate most consistent with its statutory mandate.

What Does the Fed's Federal Open Market Committee Do?

The Federal Open Market Committee is responsible for directing monetary policy through open market operations. The group is a 12-member group that is the primary committee of the Fed affecting monetary policy. Through its decisions, it sets the Fed's short-term objective for purchasing and selling securities, which is the target level of the fed funds rate, which influences other interest rates.

Is the FOMC the Same as the Fed?

No, the FOMC is not the same as the Fed. The FOMC is a committee within the Fed, the Federal Open Market Committee, and is responsible only for open market operations. The Fed's Board of Governors set the discount rate and the reserve requirements.

How Often Does the FOMC Meet?

The Federal Open Market Committee meets eight times a year.

The Bottom Line

The Federal Open Market Committee is the division of the Federal Reserve that sets monetary policy by managing open market operations. By doing this, the Fed influences the fed funds rate, which impacts other interest rates. The FOMC does this to either contract or expand the economy, depending on current market conditions.

Article Sources
  1. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "About the FOMC."
  2. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. "Birds of a Feather."
  3. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Jerome H. Powell, Chair."
  4. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "John C. Williams."
  5. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Board Members."
  6. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. "Introduction to the FOMC."
  7. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Transcripts and Other Historical Material."
  8. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Federal Reserve press release," Page 1.
  9. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement."
  10. Federal Reserve Bank of New York. "System Open Market Account Holdings of Domestic Securities."
  11. Federal Reserve Bank of New York. "Monetary Policy Implementation."
  12. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Statement on Longer-Run Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy."
Part of the Series Understanding the Role of the Fed
  1. Federal Reserve System: What It Is and How It Works
  2. Central Bank
  3. Central Banks and Interest Rates
  4. Financial Regulators
  5. Who Determines Interest Rates?
  6. Monetary Policy vs. Fiscal Policy

Introduction to the Fed

  1. 1913 Federal Reserve Act
  2. How the Federal Reserve was Formed
  3. Federal Reserve Board
  4. Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
CURRENT ARTICLE

The Fed's Roles and Functions

  1. What Do the Federal Reserve Banks Do?
  2. The Federal Reserve Chair's Responsibilities
  3. How the Federal Reserve Creates Money
  4. Federal Reserve Balance Sheet
  5. Reserve Requirements
  6. Reserve Ratio Definition
  7. Interest Rate Cuts and Consumers
  8. Fed Fund Rate Hikes and the US Dollar
  9. Open Market Operations
  10. Tight Monetary Policy
  11. Expansionary Policy
  12. Taylor's Rule