Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Fed to buy more T-bills to control lending rates

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve said Friday that it will buy short-term Treasury bills each month until the second quarter of 2020 to inject cash into the banking system and make it easier to control its benchmark lending rate.

The action marks the Fed’s latest response to a shortage of cash reserves that developed last month and caused short-term interest rates to spike, briefly sending the Fed’s benchmark rate above its target range. The New York Fed said its first monthly purchases, starting Tuesday, will total $60 billion.

The Fed also said it will extend a separate shortterm lending operation through January that is also intended to boost bank reserves.

Chairman Jerome Powell has said these Treasury purchases aren’t intended to stimulate the economy. On Friday, the Fed said its purchases are “technical” and ”should not have any meaningful effects on household and business spending decisions and the overall level of economic activity.”

Even so, large Fed bondbuying programs typically attract attention from economists and investors because they recall the extraordin­ary programs the central bank undertook to support the economy during the Great Recession and its economical­ly sluggish aftermath.

For several years through 2013, the Fed bought roughly $1.5 trillion of Treasurys and mortgage bonds to try to hold down long-term interest rates and encourage more borrowing and spending. Lower rates also led investors to invest more in stocks.

At the time, many critics feared that the purchases, known as “quantitati­ve easing” or QE, would stoke rampant inflation. That fear proved unfounded. Fed officials consider those earlier bond-buying programs to have largely succeeded. Still, some critics charge that by leading more investors to buy stocks, QE contribute­d to higher stock prices that disproport­ionately benefited wealthier Americans while leaving lower-income people with measly savings rates.

This time, the Fed has stressed that its new bondbuying isn’t intended to af

fect most interest rates. Instead, they are intended to help the Fed’s tools for setting interest rates work better.

“Purchases of Treasury bills likely will have little if any effect on longer-term interest rates, broader financial conditions, or the overall stance of monetary policy,” the Fed said in a written Q&A.

Some observers are skeptical. Paul Ashworth, an economist at Capital Economics, notes that $60 billion is three times as large as purchases under the European Central Bank’s recently announced quantitati­ve easing program.

“When it swims like a duck and quacks like a duck, it’s hard to prove your intentions aren’t fowl,” Ashworth said.

But Ashworth also acknowledg­ed in an email that “The Fed is of course correct that this isn’t the same as QE,” because it isn’t intended to lower longerterm rates.

The purchases will begin Tuesday. Fed policymake­rs met by video conference last Friday to approve the new buying operations.

The Fed’s benchmark interest rate is now a range of 1.75% to 2%. Changes in that rate flow through other interest rates, such as those charged on mortgages, to influence borrowing and spending and the broader economy.

The Fed plans to buy Treasury bills of durations between five and 52 weeks, until reserves exceed the level they were at in early September. Reserves at that time were between $1.45 trillion and $1.5 trillion, according to Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan Chase. On Wednesday, reserves were $1.35 trillion, Feroli said, suggesting that the Fed will need to buy at least $100 billion in Treasurys.

But the purchases will likely be much higher: The Fed needs reserves to offset the growth of currency, which rises at about $10 billion a month. And the central bank also wants to eventually replace about $160 billion in short-term loans it has made since the troubles in money markets first surfaced.

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