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International Summary Statistics

Current Release About Release Dates

Announcements

The U.S. Reserve Assets table 3.12 released on October 25, 2013 contained errors due to data processing. The updated table is below.

Release Date: October 2013

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U.S. Reserve Assets (3.12) 
Millions of dollars, end of period
Asset 2010 2011 2012 Mar 2013 Apr 2013 May 2013 Jun 2013 Jul 2013 Aug 2013/r Sep 2013/p
1 Total 132,433 147,953 150,175 146,329 146,795 144,042 145,703 147,427 145,755 147,650
 
2 Gold stock1 11,041 11,041 11,041 11,041 11,041 11,041 11,041 11,041 11,041 11,041
3 Special drawing rights2 3 56,824 54,955 55,050 53,704 54,055 53,695 53,881 54,214 54,292 54,966
4 Reserve position in International Monetary Fund2 5 12,492 30,080 34,161 34,039 34,143 32,750 33,860 34,483 32,880 33,364
5 Foreign Currencies4 52,075 51,878 49,922 47,544 47,556 46,556 46,920 47,688 47,543 48,278
  1. Gold held "under earmark" at Federal Reserve Banks for foreign and international accounts is not included in the gold stock of the United States; see table 3.13, line 3. Gold stock is valued at $42.22 per fine troy ounce.     Return to table
  2. Special drawing rights(SDRs) are valued according to a technique adopted by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in July 1974. Values are based on a weighted average of exchange rates for the currencies of member countries. From July 1974 through December 1980, sixteen currencies were used; since January 1981, five currencies have been used. U.S. SDR holdings and reserve positions in the IMF have also been valued on this basis since July 1974.   Return to table
  3. Includes allocations of SDR's in the Special Drawing Account in the International Monetary Fund, plus or minus transactions in SDR's. Recent allocations are as follows: August 2009--$43,069 million; September 2009--$4,529 million.   Return to table
  4. Includes holdings of Treasury and Federal Reserve System; consistent with the Quarterly Report on Treasury and Federal Reserve Foreign Exchange Operations, foreign currency denominated assets are shown not at market value but rather at amortized cost revalued at current foreign currency market exchange rates in order to report these assets in U.S. dollars. Excludes outstanding reciprocal currency swaps with foreign central banks. As of end-September 2013 total swaps outstanding were $511 million with the European Central Bank.   Return to table
  5. IMF data include the reserve tranche position and, as of May 2011, New Arrangements to Borrow.   Return to table
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Last update: October 25, 2013