The Borneo Post

US Fed’s balance sheet plan, economic outlook under microscope

-

WASHINGTON: The US Federal Reserve is expected to hold interest rates steady, shave the number of hikes projected for the rest of the year, and release long-awaited details of a plan to end the monthly reduction of its massive balance sheet.

The US central bank since early this year has signaled a ‘patient’ approach to increasing borrowing costs, drawing an end to a gradual, three- year cycle of monetary tightening marked by nine rate hikes, including seven during the 2017-2018 period.

Investors now put a 75 per cent probabilit­y on the likelihood the Fed won’t raise its overnight benchmark interest rate, or federal funds rate, any more this year, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

The fed funds rate is currently set in a range of 2.25 per cent to 2.50 per cent.

New quarterly economic and rate projection­s to be released with the latest Fed policy statement at 2 pm EDT (1800 GMT) will show how closely policymake­rs align with that view.

The Fed’s December projection called for two hikes this year, but that is widely expected to be cut to a single increase at the conclusion of the two-day policy meeting on Wednesday.

It would take a downward move by seven policymake­rs to bring the median expected number of hikes to zero for the year, a full half-percentage-point change that has happened only once since the Fed began making its ‘dot plot’ of projection­s public in 2012.

The more intense focus among investors may be on the balance sheet, and the Fed’s plans to stop reducing its holdings of Treasury bonds and mortgageba­cked securities each month by as much as US$50 billion.

Details of that plan are also expected to be released on Wednesday, providing investors with a sense of how much longer the drawdown will continue, and what will likely be left in the Fed’s portfolio of assets when it stops.

Minutes of the Fed’s policy meeting in late January showed officials wanted “to announce before too long a plan to stop reducing ... asset holdings later this year,” a statement many have construed to mean an endgame for the balance sheet would be revealed this week.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is due to hold a press conference half an hour after the release of the policy statement.

Fed officials have generally pointed to the rundown ending sooner rather than later, with perhaps just a few more months to go before the central bank hits a level where it is comfortabl­e stopping.

“Assuming the shrinking process stops in October ... the balance sheet should end up in the US$3.75 trillion region,” Cornerston­e Macro analyst Roberto Perli wrote in a preview of this week’s Fed meeting.

That is more than triple the size of the Fed’s holdings before it began three rounds of quantitati­ve easing in which it purchased trillions of dollars of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities in response to the 2007-2009 economic crisis and recession. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia