Market volatility, balance sheet surprises raise risk of bumpy Fed pivot
Send a link to a friend
[April 29, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
(Reuters) - The Federal Reserve is expected
to approve plans next week to reduce a nearly $9 trillion balance sheet
that ballooned as part of its efforts to fight the pandemic recession,
in a process U.S. central bank officials expect to run without a hitch.
The past week may point to a bumpier ride ahead, with analysts noting an
unexpected, nearly $500 billion shift in the Fed's balance sheet driven
by factors beyond its control and volatility in stock and bond markets
as signs the central bank's pivot to tighter monetary policy may not run
so smoothly.
Yields on the government bonds most sensitive to expectations for how
the Fed may cull its balance sheet have swung wildly in the past week,
and measures of fixed-income market volatility are near their highest
since the onset two years ago of the coronavirus pandemic, which set the
central bank on its bond-buying spree in the first place.
In particular, a nearly 9% drop in the S&P 500 index over the past month
may show a coming hit to household wealth that quickly translates into
lower consumer spending, said Steven Blitz, chief U.S. economist at TS
Lombard. He noted that changes in asset prices are a key and perhaps
increasingly important way monetary policy can influence economic
activity and inflation.
"The tie between consumer spending and equity market performance has
grown tighter over the years," Blitz said, as more households invest and
holdings increase among the age groups most likely to buy higher-priced
durable goods.
If markets continue to weaken, consumers will "sharply contract spending
by the end of this year, possibly sooner," he said. "This economy needs
a 'buyers strike' to flip into recession, and weak enough equities could
stress household balance sheets enough to set one off."
Graphic: Unemployed to job openings - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/JOBS/egvbkmeoepq/chart.png
The Fed wants demand to weaken, but in a measured way that is enough to
cool inflation - currently at more than 6% using the central bank's
preferred measure and more than 8% based on the widely cited consumer
price index - while leaving a strong job market largely intact.
Through asset values and other channels - rising mortgage interest rates
may already be cooling housing prices, for example - the Fed hopes
inflation can be brought down to the central bank's 2% target.
TWO-FISTED TIGHTENING
The challenge is clamping down on the economy without breaking it.
U.S. gross domestic product fell 1.4% over the first three months of the
year, the Commerce Department reported on Thursday, but the decline was
driven by a drop in government spending on pandemic programs, falling
inventories, and a spike in coronavirus cases that has since eased.
Personal spending remained strong and imports grew.
New inflation-related data to be released on Friday for March is
expected to show little relief from the trends that have pushed the Fed
from nursing the economy through the pandemic to taming the excesses of
its reopening.
Graphic: The COVID inflation surge -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/INFLATION/
akvezawxopr/chart.png
The Fed is about to tighten monetary policy in a two-fisted way that has
never been attempted with such intensity - raising interest rates in
larger, half-percentage-point increments for the first time in 22 years,
shifting in what may be record time from interest rates meant to boost
the economy to a "neutral" stance, and allowing its balance sheet to
shrink by as much as $95 billion per month likely beginning in June.
[to top of second column] |
A Wall Street sign is pictured outside the New York Stock Exchange
amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in the Manhattan
borough of New York City, New York, U.S., April 16, 2021.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
The central bank's policy committee will meet on Tuesday and Wednesday and is
expected to approve both a half-percentage-point rate hike and the upcoming
balance sheet reductions. The Fed raised its policy rate by a quarter of a
percentage point at its last meeting in March.
Plans to trim $60 billion per month from the Fed's holdings of U.S. Treasury
bonds and up to $35 billion per month from its holdings of mortgage-backed
securities were outlined in the minutes from the Fed's March meeting, and the
announcement of formal approval and a start date is not likely on its own to
have much impact.
But there is still the potential for stress in an economy that may be facing
more of it than expected between the war in Ukraine, new coronavirus lockdowns
in China that could slow improvements in the global flow of goods, and a
fast-moving Fed.
Graphic: A fast trip to neutral -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/POWELL/
zdvxogolapx/chart.png
TREASURY WILDCARD
The impact of the changes to the Fed's balance sheet will to some degree depend
on decisions outside its control, including how commercial banks and large money
market funds manage their own businesses, and how the U.S. Treasury finances
government deficits.
As the Fed becomes a smaller player in the government bond market, Treasury's
decisions to sell more long-term or short-term securities could influence
interest rates and the economy in different ways.
"The key input is how the Treasury Department alters its financing strategy in
response to the Fed stepping back," said Ed Al-Hussainy, rates strategist with
Columbia Threadneedle.
Next week will bring developments of consequence on both fronts: The Fed will
roll out its balance sheet playbook and the Treasury will unveil its debt supply
plans for the next three months. How well the two mesh is an open question.
As Al-Hussainy noted: "The Fed accounts for less than 20% of Treasury demand
while the Treasury Department accounts for 100% of supply."
Citi economist Matt King noted the potential for surprises. While it was deep in
the weeds of the Fed's operations, an apparent rush of tax payments to the
Treasury Department's account at the central bank last week, coupled with banks'
use of a technical Fed program, in effect pulled $460 billion out of the
financial system and, King said, possibly caused some of last week's stock
market volatility.
Some of that may reverse, he said, but "the trajectory remains clear," he wrote.
Central banks globally are pulling back, and the impact is "not fully priced in
to risk assets."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|