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						Fed's message on 
						portfolio trimming: prepare, don't fret 
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		 [February 01, 2017] 
		By Ann Saphir and Richard Leong 
 SAN 
		FRANCISCO/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Federal Reserve policymakers are putting 
		markets on notice that the central bank's $4.5 trillion balance sheet is 
		back on the agenda in an apparent effort to give investors time to 
		prepare for changes rather than to signal any action is imminent.
 
 Policymakers want to minimize any volatility that slimming the Fed's 
		massive balance sheet might cause, and have said they will only do so 
		after interest rate increases are "well underway."
 
 The central bank is expected to keep that line in its statement on 
		Wednesday following this year's initial policy meeting and the first one 
		under Donald Trump's administration.
 
 The Fed amassed the bonds during and after the financial crisis to 
		inject cash into the economy and put downward pressure on long-term 
		rates, and has been keeping its portfolio steady since December 2013.
 
 While the Fed has only raised rates twice since the crisis, a number of 
		Fed policymakers are already voicing support for allowing the debt 
		holdings to shrink by letting bonds mature without reinvesting the 
		proceeds.
 
		
		 
		Some have argued the process, or at least the debate over how to 
		proceed, should begin later this year. Only a few months ago, several 
		voices from within the Fed suggested the balance sheet could remain big 
		for many years to come.
 But with labor markets continuing to tighten and Trump promising tax 
		cuts and more spending, inflation and rates may rise faster than last 
		year. Trimming the balance sheet would be the Fed's next step in 
		normalizing monetary policy.
 
 Most Wall Street investors do not expect it until mid-2018, policymakers 
		are playing it safe, keen to avoid a repeat of the 2013 "taper tantrum", 
		when bond yields surged after then-Fed Chair Ben Bernanke hinted at 
		cutting the pace of bond buying.
 
 "They don't want to shock the market," said Robert Tipp, chief 
		investment strategist at Prudential Fixed Income. "They want to prepare 
		the market," he said, commenting on a slew of comments from Dallas Fed's 
		Robert Kaplan, San Francisco Fed's John Williams and Philadelphia Fed's 
		Patrick Harker.
 
 WEAKER ANCHOR
 
 The Fed is also putting investors on notice in case the slimming "could 
		come up faster if the rate hikes were faster," said Tim Duy, a professor 
		at the University of Oregon.
 
 While giving markets plenty of time, the Fed is also laying out evidence 
		why they do not need to be unduly concerned.
 
 As Fed Chair Janet Yellen pointed out in a speech in January, one reason 
		is that the average maturity of the securities in the Fed's portfolio 
		has declined, while that of the overall Treasury market has increased. (Graphic:http://reut.rs/2knWguk)
 
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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 
            
			 
Essentially, that means the Fed's portfolio has become less influential 
		as an anchor for long-term rates than in the past.
 In addition, the overall bond market has grown, reducing the relative 
		size and impact of the Fed's holdings.
 
Bernanke, for one, argues the economy is "growing into" the Fed's 
		expanded portfolio and there is no need to bring it back to pre-crisis 
		levels of around $800 billion. In fact, several Wall Street banks 
		suggest the Fed only needs to cut its bond holdings by $1 billion to 
		$1.5 billion.
 One tricky question the Fed will face is what to cut first.
 
 The Fed's $1.76 trillion mortgage-backed securities holdings account for 
		about a quarter of that market, compared to the Fed's 12 percent share 
		of the Treasury market. Any marked change in the Fed's MBS ownership 
		could have a greater impact on that market and consequently housing 
		borrowing costs.
 
On top 
of that, in contrast to the Fed's $2.46 trillion of Treasuries which mature 
according to a set calendar, the pace at which mortgage bonds mature can vary 
substantially.
 It slows down when rates rise and homeowners stick with current loans and 
accelerates when rates fall and borrowers rush to refinance debt, which 
increases the technical challenge for the Fed in engineering a wind-down.
 
 Some analyst argue that shrinking the Treasury portfolio would be the least 
disruptive, given its diminished share of the overall market.
 
 
Others, like Morgan Stanley, say the Fed should trim MBS because it wants to 
return to a Treasuries-only portfolio anyway and its size would cease to be an 
issue over time.
 "The economy should grow into the Fed's Treasury portfolio within about a 
decade," the bank's analysts wrote in a note on Friday.
 
 (Reporting by Ann Saphir and Richard Leong; Editing by Dan Burns and Tomasz 
Janowski)
 
				 
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