Fed's Waller sees some ways to go in shrinking central bank's holdings
By Michael S. Derby
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said on Thursday the U.S. central bank still has some ways to go in shrinking the size of its holdings, in comments that offer a potential resting size for the ongoing drawdown, while flagging a desire to move the holdings to shorter-dated securities.
"Given my rough estimate of the level of reserves needed to be ample, I believe we can likely continue to let a share of maturing and prepaying securities roll off our balance sheet for some time, reducing reserve balances," Waller said in the text of a speech to be presented at the Dallas Fed.
Against a Fed balance sheet that now stands at $6.7 trillion, with $3.3 trillion in bank reserves, Waller said the ongoing effort to reduce the holdings may have a visible target in view.
Waller said a "hypothetical" Fed balance sheet might stand at $5.8 trillion, with $2.7 trillion in reserves and $780 billion in the Treasury Department's account with the central bank. He noted money market turbulence in the fall of 2019 suggests a drop in reserves to below 8% of GDP is an issue, so that metric helped inform his rough estimate of where overall Fed holdings might need to fall.
After more than doubling the size of its balance sheet to a peak of $9 trillion due to COVID-19 era bond purchases, the Fed has over the last three years been steadily shedding Treasury and mortgage bonds as part of a broader normalization of monetary policy.
The Fed aggressively purchased longer-dated Treasury and mortgage bonds during the COVID-19 pandemic and is now seeking to remove much of that excess liquidity, although it is unsure how long this process, known as quantitative tightening, or QT, can run. Waller has in the past been skeptical of using the Fed's balance sheet to provide stimulus as it remains unclear how shifts in the central bank's holdings affect the economy.
SHIFT IN FED HOLDINGS
Waller was speaking a day after the release of the minutes from the Fed's June 17-18 policy meeting. The minutes showed that most Fed officials were reluctant to embrace rate cuts amid the likelihood that some form of higher inflation over an uncertain duration lies ahead due to President Donald Trump's aggressive tariffs policy.
Waller and Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman recently have flagged an openness to cutting rates at the central bank's July 29-30 meeting. Waller believes any inflation increase tied to tariffs will be a one-time event the central bank can look through. He did not comment on the outlook for short-term rates in his prepared remarks on Thursday.
Content Original Link:
" target="_blank">