Wall Street sees Fed
balance sheet normalization plan by year end: Reuters
poll
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[April 08, 2017]
By Richard Leong
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street's top
banks see the Federal Reserve laying out by year end its plan to scale
back reinvestments in Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities in order
to begin shrinking its $4.5 trillion balance sheet, a Reuters poll
showed on Friday.
Five of 15 primary dealers, or banks that do business directly with the
U.S. central bank, expected the Fed to start paring reinvestments by
year end, while the rest forecast the central bank would do so by the
end of the second quarter of 2018.
The median view of 11 dealers was for the Fed to eventually shrink its
balance sheet to $2.75 trillion.
As the U.S. central bank seems prepared to tackle unwinding its bond
holdings, primary dealers see the Fed raising interest rates two more
times by year end and three times in 2018.
Fed policymakers have turned their focus to paring the central bank's
massive bond holdings, as shown in the minutes of their March policy
meeting released on Wednesday.
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Last month, the Fed raised rates by a quarter percentage point to 0.75
percent-1.00 percent amid signs of an improving U.S. economy and stock
prices reaching record highs.
The central bank amassed its Treasuries and MBS during three rounds of
large-scale purchases known as quantitative easing, which was aimed to
lower long-term borrowing costs and combat the repercussions of a severe
recession that was exacerbated by the global credit crisis more than
eight years ago.
On Wednesday, the Fed held $2.46 trillion in Treasuries and $1.77
trillion in MBS.
While the Fed has longed to reduce those holdings, it has been reluctant
to do so due to concerns that buying fewer bonds could cause a spike in
mortgage rates and other long-term borrowing costs and hurt an economy
that has been stuck at a 2 percent growth rate.
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A police officer keeps watch in front of the U.S. Federal Reserve
building in Washington, DC, U.S. on October 12, 2016. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque//File Photo
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The Fed's willingness to embark on this change came after Donald Trump's
surprise U.S. presidential victory in November, which unleashed hopes of tax
cuts, looser regulations and infrastructure spending to bolster business
investments and job growth.
That optimism has cooled in recent weeks after Trump and the
Republican-controlled U.S. Congress failed to pass healthcare reform. This led
investors to scale back expectations on tax cuts and infrastructure spending in
2017.
Federal fiscal stimuli, analysts say, would cushion tighter financial conditions
from interest rate increases and fewer bond purchases from the Fed.
A disappointing March jobs report caused traders to briefly slash their bets on
a June rate hike on Friday before comments from influential New York Fed chief
William Dudley on rate increases and balance sheet normalization revived those
bets.
"This report doesn't take away from the Fed's near-term outlook on the economy,"
said Sam Bullard, senior economist at Wells Fargo, a primary dealer in
Charlotte, North Carolina.
In the latest Reuters poll, 13 of 17 dealers saw the Fed hiking rates to
1.00-1.25 percent by the end of the second quarter, compared with 11 of 17
dealers in a March 15 poll.
Eight of 17 dealers saw the Fed lifting rates to 1.25-1.50 percent by the end of
the third quarter, while 16 of 17 expected that rate range to be reached by year
end.
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(Reporting by Saqib Ahmed, Karen Brettell, Sinead Carew, Sam Forgione, Richard
Leong, Chuck Mikolajczak, Dion Rabouin and Rodrigo Campos; Editing by Chizu
Nomiyama and Meredith Mazzilli)
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