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Fed announces reduction in balance sheet runoff pace

FILE PHOTO: Storm clouds gather over U.S. Federal Reserve Building before evening thunderstorm in Washington

By Michael S. Derby

(Reuters) -The Federal Reserve announced plans on Wednesday to slow the speed of its balance sheet drawdown to ensure this process does not create undue stress in financial markets.

The Fed said that starting on June 1 it will reduce the cap on Treasury securities it allows to mature and not be replaced to $25 billion from its current cap of up to $60 billion per month. The Fed left the cap on how many mortgage-backed securities it will allow to roll off its books at $35 billion per month, and it will reinvest any excess MBS principal payments into Treasuries.

The move was announced at the end of its two-day Federal Open Market Committee meeting, at which the U.S. central bank left interest rates unchanged.

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The downshift in the pace of the runoff had been widely expected, although market participants weren’t sure whether the tapering of the runoff process would be announced at this week’s FOMC gathering or the one scheduled for June. To the extent there was a surprise, many analysts had been eyeing a drop in the Treasury runoff cap to $30 billion per month.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, speaking in a press conference following the Fed meeting, said the new caps would likely result in around $40 billion per month in total balance sheet runoff, alluding to how actual reductions in bonds have frequently fallen short of the caps, notably on the mortgage bond side.

Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics, said the new Treasury runoff cap "is a little more aggressive than we were expecting," while noting the Fed, in the current interest rate environment, will still face challenges getting mortgage bonds to run off at the desired pace.

Fed officials have been making the case that by moderating the drawdown pace they reduce the risk of unwanted market disruptions of the sort that occurred when they last shrunk their balance sheet. They’ve also noted that by slowing the pace of balance sheet contraction, it may allow them to reduce the overall size of their holdings by a greater degree.

Powell reiterated those views in his press conference, saying "the decision to slow the pace of runoff does not mean that our balance sheet will ultimately shrink by less than it would otherwise, but rather allows us to approach its ultimate level more gradually," which reduced the risk of market tumult.

Fed officials have been mindful about the market turmoil that took place in September 2019 during the last QT runoff and wish to avoid that happening again.

REVERSE GEAR

After doubling the size of the balance sheet to about $9 trillion from its pre-pandemic size, the Fed has been allowing some of its holdings of Treasuries and mortgage-backed bonds to expire. That process, started in the latter half of 2022, has seen the Fed’s balance sheet fall to $7.5 trillion.

The balance sheet drawdown, referred to as quantitative tightening, or QT, runs separately from the changes in central bank interest rate policy.

That said, rate rises and QT were both part of the process of rolling back the stimulus provided by the Fed due to the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic. QT is aimed at reducing excessive liquidity in the financial system to a level that will still allow normal money market volatility and afford the Fed control over the federal funds rate.

While the drawdown thus far has not had much of a market impact, the latest shift might at the margins. The downshift in QT "has the serendipitous effect of putting some downward pressure on yields, mitigating the risk of a push upwards towards 5%," said analysts at Evercore ISI.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note sank 9.5 basis points to 4.589% after the Fed announcement.

The Fed has yet to give any target for where it would like its balance sheet to stand when it is done with QT. A report last month from the New York Fed said that market demand for liquidity will be the key driver of the QT endgame, with the runoff likely finishing up some time in 2025, with Fed holdings potentially somewhere between $6 trillion and $6.5 trillion.

(Reporting by Michael S. Derby; Editing by Andrea Ricci)