NORMS AND TRENDS IN EARNING ASSETS 29 changed, the amounts will indicate by years the consistency among the several districts. Table 14 is similar to Table 6, which relates to ratios of loans and discounts to earning assets. The amounts are different, and the signs throughout are opposite. A negative change in loans and discounts corresponds to a positive change in investments, and vice versa. All districts had lower ratios of investments to earn- ing assets in 1920 than in 1919; all but one, lower ratios in 1921 than in 1920; and all but one, higher ratios in 1922 than in 1921. The increase in 1922, as compared with 1921, continues through 1923—all districts moving in a given direction but at different rates. In 1924, nine of the twelve districts reversed their direc- tion of change, eight of them in 1925 changing the downward trend between 1923 and 1924 to an upward one between 1924 and 1925. The consistency of change in direction does not appear to be of the random type; it is rather indicative of a control of the composition of the earning assets common to the banks in the separate districts. Table 7 (page 19), with the column headings interchanged, summarizes the uniformity of the direction of change from year to year. While Table 8 (page 19), with signs interchanged in both the stub and the caption, serves to indicate the direction of change TABLE 13 COMPARATIVE PERCENTAGE AMOUNTS OF DEVIATION FROM DISTRICT LEVELS AND NET YEAR-TO-YEAR CHANGE IN RATIOS OF INVESTMENTS TO EARNING ASSETS DIFFERENCES FROM DISTRICT AVERAGES, 1919-1925 Sign I Number of Cases 2 Percentage Groups vVeraces ud over ~tr - 00 ypnday ~ r 0 art ove rv Avera Average Percentage ~~ r 17 1.8: 4.09 10.20 17.08 10.08 NET PERCENTAGE CHANGE FROM YEAR TO YEAR ~ 6.19 —-J7 12 ~ 8 ox 2.06 + 70 + 4.06 + 9.74 + 5.46