Fed losses breach $100 billion as interest costs rise
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[September 16, 2023] By
Michael S. Derby
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Federal Reserve losses breached the $100 billion
mark, central bank data released on Thursday showed, and they're likely
to go a lot higher before the red ink stops.
The U.S. central bank is continuing to pay out more in interest costs
than it takes in from the interest it earns on bonds it owns and from
the services it provides to the financial sector. While there's
considerable uncertainty around how it will all play out, some observers
believe Fed losses, which began a year ago, could eventually as much as
double before abating.
William English, a former top central bank staffer now at Yale
University, said he sees a "peak" loss of around $200 billion by 2025.
Meanwhile, Derek Tang of forecasting firm LH Meyer said the loss is
likely to be between $150 billion and $200 billion by next year.
The Fed captures its losses in what it calls a deferred asset, an
accounting measure that tallies what it will eventually have to cover in
the future before it can return to its normal practice of returning its
profits to the Treasury. Losing money is very rare for the Fed. But at
the same time, the central bank has cautioned many times that the
situation in no way impairs its ability to conduct monetary policy and
to achieve its goals.
A money-losing Fed has not been a surprise given its aggressive campaign
to raise interest rates, which has taken the benchmark overnight
interest rate from the near-zero level in March 2022 to its current
5.25%-5.50% range. With inflation pressures ebbing, it's widely expected
that the Fed is done with its rate increases, or close to it.
LIQUIDITY DESTRUCTION
But that doesn't mean that the losses will stop mounting, as the current
level of short-term rates will drive up the net negative income for
quite some time. Instead, the losses will eventually stop primarily due
to the Fed's ongoing process of shrinking its balance sheet, which
complements its rate hikes.
The Fed bought bonds aggressively during the coronavirus pandemic and
its immediate aftermath, and in just over the last year it has shed
about $1 trillion in Treasury and mortgage bonds. Fed officials have
suggested there's more to do on this front, and because of that, the
central bank will have to spend less on interest because it is removing
liquidity from the financial system. Financial markets are eyeing a stop
in the second or third quarter of 2024.
The liquidity targeted by the Fed primarily exists in the form of bank
reserves and in inflows to the central bank's reverse repo facility.
Through these tools, the Fed pays a mix of banks, money managers and
others to park cash on its books, so if liquidity shrinks, it costs the
central bank less to tie up what remains, even if its policy rate
doesn't change.
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The U.S. Federal Reserve building is pictured in Washington, March
18, 2008. REUTERS/Jason Reed/File Photo
"The pace of losses will come down, even if interest rates stay
high, because reserves and (reverse repos) are declining as
securities run off, and new purchases of securities are earning the
new, higher, rates," English said. But he acknowledged "that's all
very rough" given how many factors and uncertainties are at play.
Bank reserves have fallen about $1 trillion from their peak at the
end of 2021 and stood at $3.3 trillion as of Wednesday. Meanwhile,
the reverse repo daily outstanding levels have fallen from more than
$2 trillion a day between June 2022 and the end of June this year to
$1.5 trillion on Thursday. Money market trading firm Curvature
Securities said in a research note this week that it's possible all
the money will be out of reverse repos by the end of next year,
returning the facility to where it stood just over two years ago.
POLITICAL PRICE
For some time the Fed has returned substantial amounts of money back
to the Treasury, and this money has been used to lower government
deficits.
James Bullard, the former head of the St. Louis Fed, said in an
interview on Wednesday that he's "worried" about the central bank's
losses and "it would be better not to do this." He said it likely
would have been better for the Fed to have kept some of the $1
trillion it has given the Treasury over the last decade to cover the
sort of losses it is now navigating, but he noted that's not the
system Congress has set up.
Whenever the Fed does stop losing money, it will take years before
it is able to take the deferred asset off its books and start
returning cash to the Treasury. In 2022, the Fed handed back $76
billion, after returning $109 billion in 2021.
What's more, those high levels of earnings were tied to the very low
rates then in place. It remains an open question whether the Fed
will be able to get back to that landscape, although some in the
central bank, notably New York Fed President John Williams, are
optimistic that can happen.
(Reporting by Michael S. Derby; Editing by Paul Simao)
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