Open Market Operations
Open Market Operations
The buying and selling of U.S. Treasury securities by the Federal Reserve (through the Federal Open Market Committee) to control money supply and influence interest rates. This is the primary and most frequently used monetary policy tool. The FOMC meets eight times per year to set policy direction.
When the FOMC observes rising inflation, it may sell Treasury securities to banks and dealers. This removes money from the banking system, reduces the money supply, and puts upward pressure on interest rates, helping to cool economic activity and reduce inflationary pressures.
Students often confuse the direction of effect: when the Fed BUYS securities, it injects money into the system (expansionary, lowers rates), but when the Fed SELLS securities, it removes money from the system (contractionary, raises rates). The key is to remember that buying puts money INTO banks, selling takes money OUT of banks.
How This Is Tested
- Identifying whether buying or selling securities is expansionary or contractionary policy
- Understanding the relationship between open market operations and the federal funds rate
- Recognizing that the FOMC (not the Federal Reserve Board) conducts open market operations
- Determining the effect of securities purchases or sales on money supply and interest rates
- Distinguishing open market operations from other monetary policy tools (discount rate, reserve requirements)
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| FOMC meeting frequency | 8 times per year | Approximately every 6 weeks to set monetary policy direction |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Jennifer, a financial advisor, is preparing for a meeting with her client who holds a portfolio of 70% bonds and 30% stocks. The FOMC has just announced it will begin purchasing $80 billion in Treasury securities monthly for the next six months. Jennifer needs to explain how this policy action might affect her client's portfolio. Which statement is most accurate?
B is correct. When the Federal Reserve purchases Treasury securities through open market operations, it injects money into the banking system, increasing the money supply. This expansionary monetary policy puts downward pressure on interest rates. As interest rates fall, existing bonds with higher coupon rates become more valuable, so bond prices rise (inverse relationship between rates and bond prices). This benefits the client's 70% bond allocation.
A is incorrect because it reverses the direction: Fed purchases lower rates, not raise them. D is also incorrect for the same reason. C is incorrect because open market operations are the primary mechanism by which the Fed influences interest rates throughout the economy, not just bank reserves. The increased money supply from Fed purchases flows through the banking system to all borrowers, affecting rates on mortgages, corporate bonds, and all other debt instruments.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to connect Fed policy actions to portfolio impacts. Understanding that Fed securities purchases lower interest rates and increase existing bond values is essential for advising clients on how monetary policy will affect their fixed-income holdings. This knowledge helps advisors anticipate market reactions to FOMC announcements and position client portfolios accordingly.
Which entity within the Federal Reserve System is responsible for conducting open market operations?
B is correct. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is responsible for conducting open market operations, the buying and selling of Treasury securities to implement monetary policy. The FOMC meets eight times per year to set monetary policy direction and oversees daily open market operations through the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's trading desk.
A (Board of Governors) sets the discount rate and supervises the banking system but does not conduct open market operations. C (the 12 Federal Reserve Banks) provide banking services and regional economic input, but only the New York Fed's trading desk executes open market operations under FOMC direction. D (Treasury Department) is a separate government entity that issues Treasury securities and manages federal debt, but has no role in monetary policy or Fed operations.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests knowledge of Fed structure and which entities control specific policy tools. Understanding that the FOMC (not the Board of Governors or Treasury) conducts open market operations is critical for answering regulatory and monetary policy questions correctly. This distinction appears regularly on the exam.
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Access Free BetaThe Federal Reserve announces it will sell $50 billion in Treasury securities from its portfolio over the next month. An investment adviser is considering how this action will likely affect the federal funds rate and the broader economy. Which statement most accurately describes the expected impact?
B is correct. When the Federal Reserve sells Treasury securities, banks and dealers purchase these securities by paying the Fed, which removes money from the banking system. This decreases the money supply and reduces bank reserves available for lending. With less money available, the federal funds rate (the rate banks charge each other for overnight loans) increases as banks compete for scarce reserves. This is contractionary monetary policy designed to raise interest rates and slow economic activity.
A is incorrect because selling securities removes (not injects) liquidity from the banking system, which raises (not lowers) rates. C is incorrect because open market operations primarily target the federal funds rate, though the effects ripple through all interest rates including long-term rates. D is incorrect because selling securities reduces (not increases) excess reserves, eliminating the basis for banks to compete by lowering rates.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of cause-and-effect relationships in monetary policy. Recognizing that Fed securities sales are contractionary (raise rates) while Fed securities purchases are expansionary (lower rates) is fundamental to analyzing how policy changes will affect interest-sensitive investments like bonds, preferred stocks, and REITs.
All of the following statements about open market operations are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Open market operations are NOT conducted by Congress and have nothing to do with the federal budget process. This is a critical distinction between monetary policy (controlled by the Federal Reserve through open market operations, discount rate, and interest on reserves) and fiscal policy (controlled by Congress and the President through taxation and government spending). Open market operations are conducted by the FOMC, an independent body within the Federal Reserve System.
A is accurate: open market operations specifically involve buying and selling U.S. Treasury securities (government bonds, notes, and bills) to influence money supply. B is accurate: when the Fed purchases securities, it pays banks and dealers, injecting money into the banking system, which increases money supply and lowers interest rates (expansionary policy). D is accurate: the FOMC meets eight times per year (approximately every six weeks) to review economic conditions and set the target federal funds rate, which is implemented through open market operations.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish between monetary policy (Federal Reserve actions) and fiscal policy (Congressional actions). This is one of the most commonly tested distinctions on the exam. Understanding that the Fed operates independently of Congress and the President is essential for properly interpreting economic policy announcements and their market impacts.
During a period of economic recession with rising unemployment, the FOMC announces it will purchase $100 billion in Treasury securities monthly. Which of the following statements about this policy action are accurate?
1. This represents contractionary monetary policy
2. The money supply will likely increase
3. Interest rates will likely decrease
4. This action is intended to stimulate economic growth
C is correct. Statements 2, 3, and 4 are accurate.
Statement 1 is FALSE: This is expansionary monetary policy, not contractionary. When the Fed purchases securities, it injects money into the economy to stimulate growth and combat recession. Contractionary policy would involve selling securities.
Statement 2 is TRUE: When the Fed buys $100 billion in Treasury securities, it pays banks and dealers, directly injecting $100 billion into the banking system. This increases the money supply immediately and allows banks to create additional money through lending (money multiplier effect).
Statement 3 is TRUE: Increased money supply from Fed purchases puts downward pressure on interest rates. With more money available to lend, banks compete for borrowers by offering lower rates. The federal funds rate falls, and other rates (mortgages, corporate bonds, consumer loans) typically follow.
Statement 4 is TRUE: During recession with rising unemployment, expansionary monetary policy (securities purchases) aims to stimulate economic growth by making borrowing cheaper, encouraging business investment and consumer spending, and supporting job creation.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to evaluate the coordinated effects of Fed policy actions and correctly identify whether policy is expansionary or contractionary based on economic conditions. Understanding that securities purchases are the Fed's response to recession (not inflation) is critical for analyzing policy announcements and advising clients on how their portfolios might be affected.
💡 Memory Aid
Remember: Fed BUYS bonds = Banks have MORE money = Rates go DOWN (expansionary). Fed SELLS bonds = Banks have LESS money = Rates go UP (contractionary). Think: BUY = BIG money supply, SELL = SMALL money supply. Open Market Operations = OMO = Only Most-used mOnetary tool (used daily by FOMC).
Related Concepts
This term is part of this cluster:
More in Monetary Policy Tools
Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: