Many investors and observers are keen to see what the FOMC minutes say
about the Fed's balance sheet. We suspect that the expectations for
fresh insight may be disappointed. The indications from the Fed's
leadership is that discussions are still in preliminary stages. Most of
the comments about the desire to begin reducing the balance sheet came from the
regional presidents rather than the Board of Governors.
When asked during her recent testimony Yellen barely went beyond what has
already been said. There are
four points:
First, the reducing the balance sheet will take place after the
normalization of interest rates is well under way. This is an example of strategic
ambiguity. It is revealing sort of, without precision. Many suspect that when as the Fed funds target range
moves above 1.0%, officials will get more serious.
Second, the most likely first step is to stop recycling proceeds from
maturing issues. Last year, the Federal Reserve bought roughly
$216 bln of Treasuries it reinvested funds that were freed up from the maturing
issues.
Third, the long-term goal is to return the Federal Reserve's balance
sheet to only Treasuries. Currently,
the Federal Reserve owns roughly $1.75 trillion of mortgage-backed securities.
Fourth, Yellen indicated in her recent testimony that the Fed did, in fact, want to reduce the balance sheet
over time, but did not want it to be policy tool. She had previously
suggested that if the $177 bln of
maturing Treasuries were allowed to run-off this year, it would be tantamount
to around a 50 bp increase in rates.
The Federal Reserve owns $425 bln of Treasuries that will mature in 2018
and another roughly $350 bln that mature in 2019. If the
process is allowed to run its course, the tightening will swamp the use of the Fed funds target range as the primary
tool of monetary policy.
Another implication of reducing the Fed's balance sheet is that it will
boost the federal government's debt servicing costs at a time when interest
rates may already be rising. Consider that the Federal Reserve is the
largest owner of US Treasuries. That means it receives large coupon
payments. Last year, it returned nearly $100 bln of the federal government,
which was about 40% of the net debt servicing costs.
An important known unknown is the configuration of the Federal
Reserve. We have argued the Fed's independence is safe because
rather than eroding it, President Trump will be able to name a majority of
Governors over the next year or so. There are two vacancies now, and
Tarullo has announced plans to step down in Q2. That means Trump can
nominate three of the seven-person board
this year. Next year, both Yellen and Fischer are likely to step
down.
Some of Trump's economic advisers have been critical of the Fed and
QE. The argument is that it is a significant encroachment on fiscal
policy. There was also some talk during the campaign that the balance
sheet should be reduced.
However, the operational challenge of during so may be more
formidable than campaign rhetoric can acknowledge. Also, we note
that some of the more stridently unorthodox positions, including support for
NATO, naming China as a currency manipulator on day one, not recognizing one
China, have been walked back.
During the Great Depression, the central government's balance sheet was discovered. For most high income
countries most of the time, deficits are routine,
and debt levels rise inexorably. During the Great Financial Crisis,
government balance sheets swelled, but the political will to do so indefinitely
did not materialize in sufficient force. Instead, the central banks'
balance sheets came in to
play. We suspect this will be a semi-permanent
development. What is unorthodox at one moment in time sometimes becomes
the new orthodoxy later. It may
be easier to put toothpaste back in the tube then take power away once it is conceded.
Disclaimer
Thoughts about the Fed's Balance Sheet
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
February 22, 2017
Rating: