Fed Data Shows a Half Century of Moderate Growth in the Fed’s Balance Sheet through Two World Wars – Then a Seismic Explosion Under Bernanke, Yellen and Powell


Federal Reserve Balance Sheet -- 1914 to 2018

Growth in the Federal Reserve Balance Sheet -- 2003 to 2022

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: June 6, 2022 ~

Last month the Federal Reserve Bank of New York released its 2021 annual report from its “Markets Group.” That’s the group that operates a trading floor (complete with speed dials to the trading houses on Wall Street) at the New York Fed, located not far from the New York Stock Exchange, as well as another trading floor on the premises of the Chicago Fed, which is not far from the futures exchanges in Chicago. That report showed that despite all of the recent talk about the Fed dramatically shrinking its balance sheet from its current size of $8.9 trillion, the internal Federal Reserve plan for the balance sheet is actually this: “After declining by about $2.5 trillion from the peak size reached in the first half of 2022, the portfolio stops declining in mid-2025, at which point it is held constant at $5.9 trillion.” It is thereafter projected to start growing again in line with GDP. (See page 47 of the report at this link.)

The charts above show that the Federal Reserve was able to get through World War I, the Great Depression, World War II, the Vietnam War and the stagflation of the 1970s, without an explosion in its balance sheet. But since Ben Bernanke, Janet Yellen and Jerome Powell have, in turn, sat at the helm of the Federal Reserve, there has been unprecedented growth in the Fed’s Balance Sheet.

For example, from June 1960 to August 1990, the Fed’s balance sheet increased from $53 billion to $309 billion – an increase of 483 percent in 30 years. But during the tenures of Bernanke, Yellen and Powell, the Fed’s balance sheet has exploded from $880 billion in May 2008 to $8.9 trillion in May of 2022 – an increase of 911 percent in just 14 years.

There are a number of factors to explain this unprecedented growth in the Fed’s balance sheet. Chief among them are the following:

The Federal Reserve Board of Governors has outsourced its open market operations to the New York Fed, which is, literally, owned by a handful of Wall Street megabanks. (See related articles below.)

Congress has failed to separate the giant federally-insured banks from the Wall Street casino (trading houses), by restoring the Glass-Steagall Act. This lack of Congressional action has led to the perpetual giant bailouts of Wall Street banks, which have exploded the Fed’s balance sheet through so-called Quantitative Easing (a/k/a “bailout”) measures.

The advent of the 401(k) plan which incentivizes U.S. workers to save for retirement through investments in the stock market (or to a much smaller extent, the bond market). This removes much of the public outcry to Congress when the Fed bails out Wall Street because tens of millions of workers feel that their retirement savings are also being bailed out. To fully grasp this concept, see our 2008 report on the “ownership society.” (Unknown to the average American, the top 10 percent of the wealthiest households in America own the vast majority of the stock market.)

Related Articles:

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Is the New York Fed Too Deeply Conflicted to Regulate Wall Street?

New Data Shows Fed Chair Powell Misled Congress on the Condition of the Megabanks and their Need for Emergency Loans

In a Six-Day Span in March 2020, the Dow Crashed 5,676 Points; the Fed Responded with Almost $1 Trillion in Repo Loans to 24 Trading Houses

Nomura, JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs Received a Cumulative $8 Trillion from the Fed’s Emergency Repo Loans in Fourth Quarter of 2019

Economist Michael Hudson Says the Fed “Broke the Law” with its Repo Loans to Wall Street Trading Houses

Janet Yellen’s Cash Haul of $7 Million Is Just the Tip of the Iceberg; She Failed to Report Her Wall Street Speaking Fees from JPMorgan and Others in 2018

Fed Chair Bernanke Held 84 Secret Meetings in the Lead Up to the Wall Street Collapse