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						From oil shocks to funding strains, Fed confronts new 
						complexities
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		 [September 18, 2019]  By 
		Howard Schneider 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve 
		will conclude its latest policy meeting on Wednesday buffeted by 
		conflicting economic data, under steady pressure from the White House 
		for steep interest rate cuts, and confronted as well with an unexpected 
		jump in overnight borrowing costs that may require action on its own.
 
 Despite divisions about whether a reduction in borrowing costs is 
		needed, the U.S. central bank is widely expected on Wednesday to cut its 
		key overnight lending rate by a quarter of a percentage point for the 
		second time this year.
 
 The Fed is due to release its policy statement at 2 p.m. EDT. Fed Chair 
		Jerome Powell is scheduled to hold a news conference half an hour later.
 
 A rate cut on Wednesday would lower the Fed's target policy rate to a 
		range of between 1.75% and 2.00% and dovetail with moves by central 
		banks around the world to ease monetary policy to offset the impact of a 
		U.S.-China trade war and other risks to the global economy.
 
		
		 
		From world bond markets to U.S. President Donald Trump, however, the 
		more consequential reaction may come in response to how the Fed 
		describes its latest policy decision, the expectations it sets for 
		possible rate cuts later this year and in 2020, and whether the central 
		bank shifts gears and begins to again expand its asset holdings.
 A possible change in the Fed's balance sheet policy or the central 
		bank's tools to manage interest rates only emerged as a talking point 
		among analysts this week when overnight funding rates spiked 
		unexpectedly and the federal funds rate hit 2.25%, the upper limit of 
		the target range set by the Fed at its July policy meeting.
 
 The jump in the overnight "repo" rate, a key measure of conditions in 
		U.S. financial markets, prompted the New York Fed to intervene with a 
		$75 billion auction to keep the related federal funds rate in line.
 
 Some analysts said the developments in short-term funding markets 
		indicated the Fed had gone too far in reducing the size of its balance 
		sheet in recent months, and needed to begin buying bonds again to boost 
		the level of reserves available to banks.
 
 "This is one of the signs that they should reverse course on the balance 
		sheet," and begin to increase it, said Steven Ricchiuto, chief U.S. 
		economist at Mizuho Securities. "They recognize that they have a bit of 
		a problem."
 
		
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			U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks at a panel 
			discussion at the University of Zurich in Zurich, Switzerland 
			September 6, 2019. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann/File Photo 
            
			 
(Graphic: Shock week? - 
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/editorcharts/USA-FED/0H001QX7N8H0/eikon.png)
 
 COMPLEX ISSUES
 
 The Fed has allowed the size of its balance sheet to decrease as part of its 
effort to unwind the policies put in place to fight the 2007-2009 recession.
 
While a highly technical issue, the Fed's balance sheet policy also has broader 
economic significance, and can influence rates of long-term bonds and other 
securities as it chooses to buy and sell securities. Even if the Fed only allows 
the balance sheet to expand to meet the public's demand for cash and satisfy 
banks' apparently larger-than-expected demand for reserves, it could at the 
margin ease financial conditions.
 A rate cut would be intended to do the same, as the Fed reacts to an array of 
issues that have forced it to pivot since the start of the year from a stance in 
which it expected to continue raising rates this year to one in which it is 
cutting them.
 
The question that policymakers will answer in their statement, through updated 
economic projections, and in Powell's news conference, is how much more help 
they feel the economy needs considering that U.S. unemployment is low and growth 
remains steady.
 The answer will hinge in part on how the Fed is assessing geopolitical events 
well outside its control. The on-again, off-again U.S.-China trade war, for 
example, has given policymakers little clarity about what to expect next. The 
attacks that crippled Saudi Arabian oil facilities over the weekend, which led 
to a sharp rise in oil prices, only emphasized the point.
 
 Powell and his colleagues have reduced that complex set of issues to a 
manageable phrase, saying after their July meeting that they would "continue to 
monitor the implications of incoming information for the economic outlook and 
will act as appropriate to sustain the expansion."
 
 Given the volatile events of the last few weeks, they are apt to hold onto it.
 
 (Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by 
Paul Simao)
 
				 
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