The Manila Times

Yellen: Passing grade for balance sheet drawdown

- AFP

WASHINGTON, D.C.: Efforts to unwind the US Federal Reserve’s multitrill­ion-dollar investment holdings are going well so far, outgoing central bank chief Janet Yellen said Tuesday.

Nearly a decade after the global marked the beginning of the end of its bond- buying economic stimulus program, allowing its $4.5 trillion balance sheet of assets to taper down as the economy continues to recover.

In public remarks at New York University, Yellen said Tuesday that policymake­rs had begun talking a year in advance about how to ensure the public and markets understood the Fed’s actions.

“Knock on wood,” she said, “so far, so good.”

- ance-sheet unwinding in stride, with Wall Street continuing to rally since procedures began despite widespread expectatio­ns for the central bank to increase interest rates next month for the third time this year.

Rather than sell its assets, the Fed is simply allowing debts to mature and fall off its balance sheet, a “normalizat­ion” process designed in part to avoid roiling markets.

year, the Fed is due to reduce its investment holdings by $10 billion per month, increasing the monthly rate by $10 billion every quarter until the drawdown rate hits $50 billion per month in October.

Yellen also reiterated her defense of Dodd-Frank Wall Street reforms, noting that these had raised banks’ capital strength and liquidity and improved their risk management through stress-testing.

“And we’ve required them to engage in resolution planning trouble, rather than being bailed out again, actually could be resolved,” Yellen said.

“It’s important that those things stay in place so we have a sound

President Donald Trump this month broke with tradition by denying Yellen a second term as central bank chief, appointing Fed Governor Jerome Powell to replace her.

Observers said Yellen hurt her chances at reappointm­ent with a vocal defense over the summer of Wall Street reform legislatio­n put —something Trump has vowed to roll back.

would leave the Federal Reserve Board altogether in February after her four-year term as chair expires. Her term as a board member was due to run until 2024.

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