Jamaica Gleaner

Fed minutes: Officials back reducing bond holdings this year

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UNITED STATES Federal Reserve officials signalled in discussion­s early this month that they would likely start reducing the Fed’s huge portfolio of bond holdings later this year, a step that could cause borrowing rates to rise.

At the same time, the Fed appears to be on track to resume raising its key short-term interest rate when it next meets in mid-June.

The minutes of the Fed’s May 2-3 meeting, released Wednesday, show that officials not only discussed beginning a reduction of bond holdings this year, but also expressed approval for a plan on how the bond sales should proceed.

The Fed would set a cap on the size of maturing bonds to be sold each month and a schedule for gradually raising the cap. The goal would be to minimise the effect of the bond sales on loan rates paid by consumers and businesses. Typically, a sell-off of the Fed’s bonds would gradually ripple through the economy and force up many borrowing rates.

The first signal from the Fed in April that it was considerin­g a move to start reducing its US$4.5-trillion portfolio this year had initially jolted investors.

In laying out a possible approach to reducing its bond holdings, the Fed appeared Wednesday to be trying to further prepare financial markets for the impending change. The minutes of this month’s meeting indicated that the Fed may soon release updated details on how the bond reductions will be achieved.

Unemployme­nt rate a key factor

After it met early this month, the Fed left its key policy rate unchanged after having raised it at its December and March meetings. Most economists and investors have said they think the Fed will raise rates twice more this year, with the next one occurring after the next policy meeting ends June 14. Nothing in the material the Fed released on Wednesday suggested otherwise.

Economists suggested that the Fed’s decision on when to raise rates again will depend heavily on how the job market fares. Some noted that since the Fed met early this month, the government reported that unemployme­nt in April fell to a decade low of 4.4 per cent, with a healthy 211,000 jobs added.

“Our money is on the unemployme­nt rate as being the key variable driving policy forward,” said Chris Rupkey, senior analyst at Bank of TokyoMitsu­bishi. Rupkey noted that the jobless rate is already below the 4.7 per cent level that the Fed considers as signalling full employment.

The Fed minutes said, “Most participan­ts judged that if economic informatio­n came in about in line with their expectatio­ns, it would soon be appropriat­e for the committee to take another step” to raise rates.

The minutes did not spell out what officials meant by “soon.” But the minutes made clear that Fed officials believe that a sharp slowdown in economic growth early this year was likely “transitory” and would be followed by stronger growth in coming months.

In discussing why the Fed thought it was appropriat­e to hold off on raising rates at its meeting early this month, the minutes said “members generally judged that it would be prudent to await additional evidence indicating that the recent slowdown in the pace of economic activity had been transitory before taking another step” to raise rates.

For seven years, the Fed left its key short-term rate at a record-low near zero in an effort to support the economy’s recovery from the 2007-2009 recession, the worst downturn since the 1930s.

The Fed raised rates for the first time in December 2015 and has followed with two more modest increases, in December last year and then in March. The Fed indicated in March that it still expected to boost rates twice more this year.

 ?? AP ?? In this June 19, 2015 file photo, people walk past the Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board Building in Washington.
AP In this June 19, 2015 file photo, people walk past the Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board Building in Washington.

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