Federal Reserve Tiptoes To The Taper

 | Jul 14, 2021 06:51AM ET

The minutes to the June Federal Reserve FOMC meeting reinforce the message that we are set for a tapering of QE asset purchases this year, but the form and speed it takes will be driven by the datah2 Recovery on track, more inflation concerns, but slow jobs hold the Fed back/h2

The minutes go into more detail on why Fed officials are sounding more upbeat on the economic outlook with an acceptance that “indicators of economic activity and employment had strengthened” and even parts of the economy most impacted “had shown improvement”. There was an acknowledgment of the higher inflation readings, but the Fed is still of the mindset that this is “largely reflecting transitory factors”.

Nonetheless, “a substantial majority of participants judged that the risks to their inflation projections were tilted to the upside because of concerns that supply disruptions and labour shortages might linger for longer and might have larger or more persistent effects on prices and wages than they currently assumed”.

The key interest though is surrounding the discussion on the tapering of the Fed’s QE asset purchases that are currently running at $80bn of Treasuries per month and $40bn of Agency mortgage backed securities. The FOMC’s position was that "substantial further progress was generally seen as not having yet been met”, but they “expected progress to continue”.

What is holding them back seems to be the labour market with “many participants” noting that the “economy was still far from achieving the Committee’s broad-based and inclusive maximum-employment goal”.

h2 The taper is coming/h2

While not imminent, the likelihood of a taper announcement this year is growing. The minutes tell us that “various participants” believe the conditions required to justify tapering look set to come “somewhat earlier than they had anticipated at previous meetings in light of incoming data”. Nonetheless, “some participants saw the incoming data as providing a less clear signal about the underlying economic momentum” and preferred to see more data over “coming months”.

As for the discussion on what form the taper takes “several participants saw benefits to reducing the pace of [agency mortgage backed securities] purchases more quickly or earlier than Treasury purchases in light of valuation pressures in housing markets.” There was not universal agreement though with “several other participants” believing that reducing the pace of Treasury and MBS purchases “commensurately was preferable because this approach would be well aligned with the Committee's previous communications or because purchases of Treasury securities and MBS both provide accommodation through their influence on broader financial conditions”.

h2 Keep it simple, make it swift/h2
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With the taper now on the table it really is down to the data that will determine the path forward. We remain optimistic on the demand side of the equation, but it is clear from the majority of business surveys that corporate America is facing bottlenecks in supply chains while also suffering from a lack of suitable workers. These supply side weaknesses are likely to mean output doesn’t reach its potential and that inflation is likely to be a more significant and prolonged issue.

Given this backdrop we think the pressure to taper asset purchases will build over the summer with the taper potentially announced as soon as September, although today’s minutes would likely favour December. As for the form it takes, we suspect a majority will favour using the template from the 2013/14 tapering program as it is simple and predictable and can be accelerated easily if the data justifies it. Moreover, we don’t see the need to focus on MBS given the housing transactions are slowing on limited housing supply with buyers already starting to walk away as prices become extremely elevated. In any case, mortgage rates respond similarly to Treasury yields so there seems little need to be too clever in the taper process.

Consequently, we expect to see consistent $15bn reductions per meeting with $10bn cut per month for Treasuries and $5bn for agency MBS. This may be accelerated in 2022, with it brought to a conclusion before the end of 2Q22. This could pave the way for interest rate hikes as soon as 2H22.

h2 Federal Reserve balance sheet now exceeds $8tn/h2