KEY POINTS
  • The Fed is working with the Office of Inspector General in its review of trades made by central bank officials to determine if they met ethics standards and did not break any laws.
  • Those trades, some of which totaled millions of dollars, have sparked concern that central bank officials could have traded based on nonpublic information.
  • Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida, Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan and Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren all traded just before and during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Federal Reserve said Monday that it has asked the Office of Inspector General to review trades made in 2020 by a handful of central bank officials to determine if the transactions met ethics standards and did not break the law.

The addition of the Inspector General's office adds weight to a growing controversy at the Fed after a series of financial disclosures showed that Vice Chair Richard Clarida, Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan and Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren all made significant financial transactions in 2020.