Federal Reserve expected to unveil bond-buying taper plan next month

Federal Reserve expected to unveil bond-buying taper plan next month

by Joseph Anthony
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The Federal Reserve will announce a plan to taper its asset purchases in September, according to a solid majority of economists polled by Reuters who also said the US jobless rate would remain above its pre-pandemic level for at least a year.

Since the release last week of a strong US jobs report, which showed an unexpectedly sharp drop in the unemployment rate to 5.4 per cent in July, a flurry of Fed officials have suggested the U.S. central bank might start reducing its $120 billion in monthly purchases of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities (MBS) sooner rather than later.
Nearly two-thirds of respondents, 28 of 43, said the Fed is likely to announce a taper of its asset purchases โ€“ currently set at $80 billion of Treasuries and $40 billion of MBS per month โ€“ at its September meeting.
But while that timing has become more likely in the minds of many Fed watchers over the past month, it is by no means a done deal for all of them.
โ€œI know some Fed officials are pushing for it to happen at the September meeting, but that is very unlikely,โ€ said Jim Oโ€™Sullivan, chief US macro strategist at TD Securities.
โ€œNovember is possible if the next two employment reports are strong enough, but the odds favor December as the time of the formal announcement.โ€
More than one-third of respondents in the poll said the central bankโ€™s policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will wait until November or December. None of the respondents said it would be announced at the Fedโ€™s central banking conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, this month, compared with the more than one-quarter who said in a June poll that it would.
Nearly 60 per cent of respondents, 26 of 43, said they expected the Fed to start the reductions of its asset purchases in the first quarter of next year. Nearly all the rest said it would happen in the fourth quarter of 2021.
The poll concluded the Fed will start with monthly reductions of $10 billion in its purchases of Treasuries and $5 billion in those of MBS. Some responses were as high as $20 billion for both Treasuries and MBS.
More than 80 per cent of respondents, 24 of 29, said they expect the Fed to stop purchasing assets by the end of next year.
US inflation data for July, which was released this week, suggested to many that price pressures may have already peaked in the worldโ€™s biggest economy.
Still, the core personal consumption expenditure price index was predicted to average 3.1 per cent, 2.5 per cent and 2.1 per cent in 2021, 2022 and 2023, respectively, above the central bankโ€™s target of 2 per cent.
But the unemployment rate is likely to remain above its pre-pandemic level of 3.5 per cent for at least a year, according to 32 of 37 economists who replied to a separate question.
โ€œWe suspect recovering half of the job losses is sufficient for many on the FOMC to begin tapering, particularly in light of the Committeeโ€™s view about upside risks to the inflation outlook,โ€ said Michael Gapen, chief US economist at Barclays.
Still, the Fed was expected to keep its key interest rate unchanged at near zero at least until 2023.
โ€œRelative to the performance of its economy, the US central bank is the most dovish in the world and is likely to start its hiking cycle a year or so later than normal. Moreover, if growth falters the Fed will simply delay even longer,โ€ said Ethan Harris, global economist at Bank of America Securities.
Buoyed by around a trillion dollars of fiscal stimulus, ultra-easy monetary policy and a rapid COVID-19 vaccination drive, the US economy surpassed its pre-pandemic level with an annualised 6.5 per cent expansion in gross domestic product last quarter โ€“ the fastest recovery in the nationโ€™s history.
But economic growth is expected to average 6.2 per cent in 2021, a significant downgrade from the 6.6 per cent predicted a month ago, according to the poll, as the rapidly spreading Delta variant has pushed the number of new coronavirus cases to more than a six-month high.
The poll showed GDP growth slowing to 4.2 per cent in 2022 and 2.4 per cent in 2023 despite the Senateโ€™s passage of a $1 trillion infrastructure bill on Tuesday and the start of a debate on a separate $3.5 trillion spending blueprint. The infrastructure bill, which has not yet been passed by the US House of Representatives, would be the biggest US investment on roads, airports and waterways in decades.
REUTERS

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