The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Fed likely to pare its bond portfolio even with hazy outlook

- By Martin Crutsinger AP Economics Writer

When the Federal Reserve meets this week, it’s sure to take account of the economic consequenc­es of two devastatin­g hurricanes.

It will also be awaiting an announceme­nt, possibly within weeks, about its own leadership: whether President Donald Trump will ask Janet Yellen to remain Fed chair beyond February, when her term ends.

Amid the uncertaint­y, the Fed is considered all but sure to announce after its meeting ends Wednesday that it will begin paring its enormous bond portfolio — a process that’s likely to cause consumer and business loan rates to rise gradually over time.

It is, in a way, a kind of mini rate hike.

The Fed’s balance sheet has reached $4.5 trillion — roughly five times its size before the financial crisis erupted in 2008. Its size reflects bond purchases the Fed made after the crisis struck to try to ease longterm borrowing rates, encourage spending and energize an anemic economy. Now, with a far healthier economy, the Fed wants to begin shrinking its portfolio. Doing so, even gradually, will likely make some longterm loans, like mortgages, costlier.

Still, the Fed has telegraphe­d its move for months, and investors are thought to be well-prepared for it.

“The start to reducing the Fed’s balance sheet is an action the markets are ready for,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at DS Economics. “The Fed has laid out a roadmap, and there is really a sense of relief to finally get it started.”

In June, the Fed spelled out its plan for shrinking the balance sheet: It would let a small portion of bonds mature each month without being replaced. It would start with reductions of $10 billion a month — $6 billion in Treasurys and $4 billion in mortgage bonds — and raise the amount quarterly until it reached $50 billion a year later.

To avoid spooking investors, the process would be so grad-

ual that the Fed’s balance sheet would remain above $3 trillion until late 2019. Some economists say they think the figure could end up around $2.5 trillion, still far above the $900 billion the Fed held in its portfolio in pre-crisis days.

Still, some economists say they worry that while the Fed’s early reductions to its portfolio might not cause a stir, the cumulative sales could eventually unsettle markets.

“I think from time to time, we could get a significan­t amount of instabilit­y just because the bond sales are going to go on for so many years,” said David Jones, author of a number of books on the Fed.

The issue of when and how the Fed will manipulate its main policy lever — its target for short-term rates — in coming months is less clear. After leaving its benchmark rate at a record low for seven years after

the 2008 crisis, the Fed has modestly raised the rate four times since December 2015 to a still-low range of 1 percent to 1.25 percent.

The Fed has felt confident to raise rates because it appears to have met one of its key mandates: Maximizing employment. The unemployme­nt rate is just 4.4 percent, near a 16-year low. The Fed, though, has yet to achieve its other objective of stabilizin­g prices at a 2 percent annual rate. Inflation has remained persistent­ly below that level. As a result, financial markets are unsure whether the Fed will raise rates again before year’s end.

The CME Group’s tracker of investor sentiment puts the likelihood of a rate hike by December at 57 percent.

Some economists say they think that by then, inflation will finally have begun to increase and weakness caused by the hurricane disruption­s will have started to fade and that the Fed will conclude that the economy can withstand a further slight tightening of credit.

“The economic data will be soft on a temporary basis, but the fundamenta­ls are solid,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, who foresees a third rate hike in December and three more next year.

But other analysts say that on top of chronicall­y low inflation, the economic slowdown caused by Hurricanes Harvey and Irma could be more severe than initially forecast and cause the Fed to remain on hold for longer.

“I think the two hurricanes are going to give the Fed pause about raising rates again until they have a better idea of the economic impact,” said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University, Channel Islands.

In addition to forecastin­g future rate hikes, analysts are trying to divine whether President Donald Trump will re-nominate Yellen to a second four-year term. Last week, Trump said of Yellen, “I like her, and I respect her” but added, “I haven’t made a decision yet.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen speaks in Washington on June 14 to announce the Federal Open Market Committee decision on interest rates following a two-day meeting.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen speaks in Washington on June 14 to announce the Federal Open Market Committee decision on interest rates following a two-day meeting.

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