Fed's Bostic says three hikes, fast balance sheet runoff needed for
inflation fight
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[January 11, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - High inflation and a
strong recovery will require the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates
at least three times this year, beginning as soon as March, and warrant
a rapid rundown of Fed asset holdings to draw excess cash out of the
financial system, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said.
"There is a risk inflation is likely to be elevated for an extended
period of time and we need to respond directly, clearly and
aggressively," Bostic told Reuters in an interview on Monday. "If things
continue the way they are March would be a reasonable possibility," for
the first of what would be a series of interest rate increases to offset
inflation running far above the Fed's 2% target.
He added he does not feel the explosion in new coronavirus infections
will derail the recovery, but to the contrary feels it more likely
inflation will intensify further and require a fourth quarter-point rate
increase in 2022 than that it slows and allows the Fed to relax.
His remarks reflected the Fed's turn towards inflation fighting, a shift
cemented at a December meeting where officials accelerated plans to
raise interest rates and begin to pull back on their holdings of U.S.
Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities accumulated during the
pandemic.
Bostic, in detailed remarks about the management of the Fed's balance
sheet, said the central bank should be aggressive there as well -
allowing its holdings to decline by at lease $100 billion a month, and
with plans to quickly pull at least $1.5 trillion out of financial
markets that he considers pure "excess liquidity."
From 2017 to 2019, when the Fed was shrinking its balance sheet years
after the end of the 2007 to 2009 recession, it phased the pace of
decline in slowly, capped it at $50 billion per month, and ultimately
decreased its balance by only $600 billion before financial markets
signaled the system did not have enough cash reserves at hand.
The process promises to be much different this time, and Bostic for
example said he felt there was no need to phase in any balance sheet
"runoff" because markets know what to expect.
"I would hope we would move pretty quickly and get out of this emergency
stance," Bostic said. "The tool is pretty well understood and the
motivation is pretty well understood."
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Raphael Bostic, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta,
poses for a photo in Knoxville, Tennessee, U.S., March 23 2018.
REUTERS/Ann Saphir
"It should go faster for sure," Bostic said, and at a quick enough pace to
complete the process in "a couple of years."
The debate over how to treat the Fed's asset holdings got underway in full at
the Fed's December meeting with staff presentations on the issue and initial
discussion among policymakers.
The Fed has bought more than $4 trillion of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed
securities since the onset of the pandemic in early 2020, more than doubling the
overall size of its balance sheet from $4.1 trillion to more than $8.7 trillion.
Initially a way to keep financial markets stable, the holdings are now thought
to be holding down long-term interest rates that the Fed may want to move higher
to curb demand - and prices - for a variety of goods.
Bostic, who does not have a vote on monetary policy this year, was among the
first Fed officials to expect that the pace of the recovery would be stronger
than anticipated, and a year ago, with the economy slowing, was one of the few
expecting higher interest rates in 2022.
His concern now is that some of the things driving inflation may be here to
stay.
In particular Bostic said he takes seriously comments he gets from local
business leaders that they are planning for more resilient supply chains that
will almost by definition be more expensive to maintain, and that they feel they
currently have pricing power in the market and plan to use it.
"So the question really is how forcefully or fulsomely do we have to respond to
make sure that it stays in a boundary," Bostic said. "I think we need to be
acting pretty forcefully."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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