But
that run-off will do little to trim what is the most
controversial portion of the Fed's portfolio, the $2.7 trillion
in mortgage-backed securities that it currently holds. Under the
New York Fed's projections the portion of assets held in MBS
would remain roughly constant through 2025, with the central
bank still holding roughly $1 trillion of those securities by
2030.
The Fed wants to shift its holdings out of the mortgage market
altogether, and the expected slow run-off of MBS has prompted
some policymakers to call for outright sales of those
securities.
The New York Fed's annual report on its open market operations
provides a key glimpse of how the Fed's asset holdings, which
ballooned to nearly $9 trillion during the pandemic as it bought
assets to stabilize core financial markets, will evolve now that
the Fed is letting its balance sheet shrink.
Monthly declines will be about $80 billion through 2024, the New
York Fed estimated.
The decline will continue for about three years, the New York
Fed said, at which point the Fed's holdings could be held
constant, at an estimated 22% of gross domestic product, then
grow again in proportion to the economy.
Reserves required by the banking system are included in that
amount, which the New York Fed estimated at around 8% of gross
domestic product.
The report also highlighted risks around the Fed's transition to
a smaller balance sheet at a time when interest rates are
rising. One of the Fed's tools for raising short-term market
interest rates is to pay more for reserve deposits held by banks
at the Fed. Just as those expenses rise, the Fed's roll-off of
its own holdings mean it will be earning less in interest
payments from its Treasury bonds and mortgage securities.
Under current projections Fed "net income is projected to
decline notably," the New York Fed said, meaning smaller profits
to be turned back to the U.S. Treasury.
If rates rise even faster the Fed could, for a time at least, be
operating at a loss, forced in effect to print money to pay its
bills and halting remittances to the Treasury altogether. Fed
remittances in 2021 were more than $100 billion.
Since the market price of securities falls when yields rise,
higher interest rates also mean that the market value of the
Fed's portfolio has fallen, and by next year could on paper be
worth about $300 billion less than its face value.
Fed officials have acknowledged that, should they choose to sell
MBS in a higher-interest rate environment, they might realize
losses. Their Treasury investments, however, are intended to be
held until maturity, when the full face value is repaid.
(Reporting by Howard SchneiderEditing by Chizu Nomiyama and Nick
Zieminski)
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