COMPANIES

Federal Reserve

Office address: 20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20551
Website: federalreserve.gov
Year established: 1913
Company type: central bank (federal agency)
Employees: 24,000+
Expertise: monetary policy, financial system stability, bank supervision and regulation, payment systems and settlement, consumer protection, community development, economic research and analysis, financial institution examination
Parent company: US Government
Key people: Jerome Powell (chair); Philip Jefferson (vice chair); Michelle Bowman (vice chair for supervision); Michael Barr, Lisa Cook, Stephen Miran, and Christopher Waller (governors)
Financing status: N/A

The Federal Reserve operates as the US central bank from Washington, DC. The organization conducts monetary policy, supervises financial institutions, and runs payment systems. Also called “The Fed”, it has 24,000 staff, 12 regional banks, and 24 branches nationwide as of 2025.

History of the Federal Reserve

In 1913, Congress founded the Federal Reserve to address repeated financial crises. The new system featured 12 regional banks overseen by a central Board in Washington.

Banks could borrow cash during tight times by pledging their loans as collateral. The Fed also transformed payment systems, making check clearing faster and check movement smoother nationwide.

The Great Depression reshapes power

October 1929 brought a stock market crash that led to the Great Depression. Congress blamed the Fed for failing to prevent bank collapses during the financial panic.

Power shifted from regional banks to the central Board of Governors in DC. The Treasury competed with the Fed for control over monetary policy for the next two decades.

Fighting for independence

World War II forced the Federal Reserve to keep government bond rates locked below 2.5 percent. After 1945, inflation exploded as wage and price controls vanished overnight.

The Treasury wanted low rates to service its debt, but the Federal Reserve wanted higher rates to fight inflation. The Accord of 1951 finally freed the Fed from Treasury control and gave it true independence from that point on.

The Federal Reserve fights inflation surge

Stagflation (high inflation and high unemployment) hit hard in the 1970s when inflation and unemployment both climbed together. Paul Volcker took over and raised interest rates sky-high to crush inflation completely. His brutal approach triggered a nasty recession but killed inflation for good.

The 2008 financial crisis and 2020 COVID pandemic also forced the Federal Reserve to slash rates to zero and buy trillions in securities to stabilize markets.

AI enters the picture

Now the Fed faces a new test: artificial intelligence spreading through banking systems fast. Governor Michael Barr warned in 2025 that banks are moving too quickly into AI without guardrails in place. AI systems trading with each other could spike market volatility or trigger systemic risk across markets.

The Federal Reserve also understands AI will transform finance eventually but waits for solid evidence before making big calls. Unlike Fed Chair Alan Greenspan in the 1990s, today's leaders won't bet heavily on technology promises.

The Federal Reserve's services

The Federal Reserve provides essential financial tools that support banking and economic stability nationwide:

Monetary policy and interest rates

  • federal funds rate management: sets the target lending rate
  • open market operations: buys and sells securities
  • discount window lending: provides emergency loans to banks
  • quantitative easing programs: large purchases when rates are zero
  • forward guidance: releases statements on future policy

Bank supervision and consumer protection

  • bank examination and supervision: reviews bank safety and soundness
  • consumer protection enforcement: monitors fair lending compliance
  • capital and risk management rules: requires adequate bank reserves
  • community reinvestment oversight: ensures service to low-income areas

Payment systems and banking services

  • check clearing and processing: clears checks between banks electronically
  • electronic funds transfers: moves money between accounts instantly
  • currency distribution: supplies coins and bills to banks
  • government banking services: maintains Treasury accounts and securities

Financial stability and economic research

  • financial stability monitoring: tracks banking system risks continuously
  • economic research and analysis: publishes inflation and employment studies
  • data collection and publication: gathers and releases bank data
  • systemic risk assessment: identifies threats to financial stability

The Federal Reserve funds community projects, teaches banking basics, shares research data, and offers multilingual access. It also publishes research that economists and policymakers rely on daily. Through 12 regional banks, the organization serves communities nationwide with financial support.

Culture and corporate values

The Federal Reserve maintains strict ethical standards to ensure fair decision-making and public trust. It also says that employees must follow ethics rules to prevent actual and perceived conflicts of interest.

The organization provides extensive benefits to its workforce:

  • health coverage: flexible spending accounts alongside medical, dental, and vision insurance for families
  • insurance protection: auto, homeowners, and legal coverage plus disability and life insurance options
  • retirement benefits: pension plan with vesting after five years and employer matching up to 7 percent of thrift plan contributions
  • flexible work options: compressed schedules, flextime, job sharing, and remote work plus transit subsidies and free carpool parking
  • professional development: tuition assistance and workshops for skill building and continuing education
  • paid time off: annual and sick leave with two floating holidays yearly plus 12 weeks paid parental leave
  • workplace amenities: fitness centers, credit union offices, financial seminars, and cultural arts programs

For students who seek hands-on experience, the Federal Reserve internship targets undergraduates and graduates in economics, finance, software development, and law. Interns create personal learning goals, work with assigned mentors, and attend weekly networking events.

About Chair Jerome Powell and key people

Jerome Powell leads the Federal Reserve Board as chair and heads the Federal Open Market Committee. Before joining the Fed, Powell worked at the Bipartisan Policy Center focusing on federal and state budget matters. Powell earned a politics degree from Princeton University and a law degree from Georgetown University.

The Board of Governors includes six additional members who guide the organization:

  • Philip N. Jefferson is vice chair, bringing expertise from leading economics departments at Davidson College and Swarthmore College
  • Michelle W. Bowman is vice chair for supervision, the only board member with banking and state supervisory experience from her Kansas bank commissioner role
  • Michael S. Barr works as governor; he previously taught financial regulation and founded Michigan Law School's Center on Finance, Law & Policy
  • Lisa D. Cook serves as governor; she directed the American Economic Association Summer Training Program and advised former president Barack Obama on economic policy
  • Stephen I. Miran is governor; he recently chaired the Council of Economic Advisers under President Trump before joining the Fed
  • Christopher J. Waller is governor; he spent 16 years leading research operations at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis before his appointment

Board members are nominated by the president and confirmed by the senate to 14-year terms. No governor can serve two full consecutive terms, though those finishing unexpired terms may be reappointed.

The future at the Federal Reserve

The Federal Reserve has been discussed in the context of how it adjusts policy based on labor market weakness and inflation. At the 2025 Future Proof Festival, an annual investment and wealth management industry conference, former Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Rob Kaplan spoke on a panel.

He noted that weak job markets force the Fed to act on rate cuts despite inflation still running above target. He also emphasized that the Federal Reserve's role is to respond to current economic conditions rather than market expectations for future years.

The organization also uses balance sheet management and interest rate policy to support employment and control inflation. For example, in October 2025, Powell hinted at pausing balance sheet reductions as labor market weakness grew. Interest payments on bank reserves help the Fed maintain control over short-term interest rates effectively.

The latest Federal Reserve news

Displaying 3634 results
RIA NEWS SEP 23, 2009
Fed slows $1.45T program to aid housing market

With the U.S. economy on the mend, the Federal Reserve on Wednesday said it is slowing the pace of a program to lower mortgage rates and prop up the housing market.

RIA NEWS SEP 22, 2009
Rebound in commodities carries stocks higher

Stocks rose in morning trading Tuesday as commodities rebounded ahead of the Federal Reserve's meeting on interest rates.

RIA NEWS SEP 20, 2009
Deflation hawks say economy may spiral downward

Deflation is working its way back into polite conversation.

RIA NEWS SEP 17, 2009
Fed: Americans' wealth increased for first time in nearly two years

Americans' wealth rose this spring for the first time in nearly two years, with stocks and home values gaining as the recession faded.

RIA NEWS SEP 16, 2009
Urgency for new rules for finance is slipping away

The rule book for Wall Street may not change that much after all.

RIA NEWS SEP 16, 2009
U.S. factories produce more, inflation is in check

U.S. factories made more cars, clothing and other goods than expected in August, and inflation remained in check in the early stages of a broad economic recovery.

RIA NEWS SEP 15, 2009
Bernanke says recession 'very likely over'

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said today that the worst recession since the 1930s is probably over.

RIA NEWS SEP 15, 2009
U.S. wholesale prices soar 1.7% in August

U.S. inflation at the wholesale level shot up at double the expected rate in August as gasoline prices soared by the largest amount in a decade.

RIA NEWS SEP 15, 2009
Retail sales rise more than expected in August

Retail sales jumped in August, spurred by widespread gains beyond the increases of auto and gasoline sales that economists expected.

Advisers skeptical of Obama's Wall Street reform plans

Advisers are wary of President Obama's financial-regulation plans despite his warning today against a return “to the days of reckless behavior and unchecked excess.”

Schwab says advisers are growing 'cautiously optimistic'

Managing client expectations about investment performance remains independent advisers' biggest challenge, but they are regaining confidence in the economy and directing more investments to equities and away from cash and bonds, according to The Charles Schwab Corp.'s semiannual Independent Advisor Outlook Study.

RIA NEWS SEP 14, 2009
A year later, worries linger on economy

Seven out of 10 Americans lack confidence that the federal government has taken safeguards to prevent another financial industry meltdown, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll.

Dementia poses threat to aging boomers' portfolios

A startling number of older adults either lack the cognitive abilities to manage their finances or delegate that responsibility to others — a finding that could have implications for plan executives and other fiduciaries as a wave of wealthy Americans approach retirement.

RIA NEWS SEP 11, 2009
Dollar slump continues as gold hits 18-month high

The week's dollar sell-off continued today, with the greenback hitting a fresh 12-month low.

RIA NEWS SEP 10, 2009
New jobless claims fall more than expected to 550K

The Labor Department says initial claims for unemployment insurance fell to a seasonally adjusted 550,000 from an upwardly revised 576,000 in the previous week. Analysts expected claims to drop to 560,000, according to Thomson Reuters.