Soothing words from Fed as rate hits ceiling for first
time
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[October 27, 2018]
By Jonathan Spicer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Federal Reserve
officials have tried this week to ease concerns on Wall Street that bank
reserves are growing scarce and that the Fed's key rate will edge up
above a policy range, possibly forcing it to permanently hold more
assets than planned.
Thursday marked the third straight day in which the federal funds policy
rate traded at its effective ceiling of 2.20 percent. Before this week,
the policy rate had approached but never landed on the rate the Fed pays
banks on excess reserves (IOER), activated in 2015 to keep the policy
rate contained.
The policy rate has drifted higher in its range throughout the year,
causing the Fed in June to tweak the IOER lower. To provide a buffer, it
now sits 0.05 percent below the upper end of the overall policy range of
2.00-2.25 percent.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2018/Oct/27/images/ads/current/brickey_lda_061314.png)
The upward drift has renewed a debate over whether the Fed's reduction
of its massive bond holdings, which started a year ago, has made it more
expensive for banks to borrow excess reserves to meet regulatory
requirements or fund their daily needs. (Graphic: Bank excess reserves
held at the Fed - https://tmsnrt.rs/2Jh0PPN)
Reserves have fallen more quickly than the Fed's portfolio, leading some
in the market to believe a scarcity is behind the upward creep in the
policy rate, and that the portfolio trimming would have to stop soon.
That, in turn, could leave the Fed with a more accommodative policy
stance overall.
"If one thought that the drift higher in the funds rate were the result
of growing scarcity of reserves in the interbank market, then it would
signal to the Fed a need to slow or stop pulling reserves out of the
banking system via their balance sheet normalization," wrote Michael
Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan.
He added, however, that there was so far "little evidence that reserves
are becoming scarce."
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![](../images/102718pics/busine45.jpg)
The Federal Reserve building is pictured in Washington, DC, U.S.,
August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie/File Photo
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2018/Oct/27/images/ads/current/stclara_lda_2018.png)
Central bankers agree.
Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester discussed the issue twice over two days
of events in New York, telling investors on Thursday that a series of other
one-off factors was driving the policy rate's upward drift, including the supply
of fed funds from government-sponsored home-loan banks.
Another downward tweak to the IOER, to provide more of a buffer, "wouldn't
bother me," she said. "We can think about that separately from" the ultimate
size of the balance sheet and longer-term operating framework, Mester added.
Hours later, at a conference on Friday at the Bank of France in Paris, the Fed
official running market operations argued that even if the effective policy rate
rose above IOER, it would not signal reserves scarcity. At any rate, it was
unrelated to any future decision on how much to shrink the current $4 trillion
in bonds on the Fed's balance sheet, said Simon Potter, executive vice president
at the New York Fed.
"Let me be clear: observing the (policy rate) and other rates above the (IOER)
is not a sufficient condition for reserve scarcity," Potter said at the
conference.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2018/Oct/27/images/ads/current/charrons_bch041713.png)
The Fed bought some $3.5 trillion in bonds to spur recovery from recession in
the last decade, leaving it with a total of $4.5 trillion in overall assets as
of October last year.
Since then, it has shed some $250 billion, even as bank reserves have dropped by
more than twice that value. The Fed has never specified how much it wants to
trim its asset holdings.
(Reporting by Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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