Friday, July 22, 2022

The Federal Reserve Is Not Shrinking Its Balance Sheet

On May 4, 2022 the Federal Reserve Board of Governors issued this press release:

Plans for Reducing the Size of the Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet

....The Committee intends to reduce the Federal Reserve's securities holdings over time in a predictable manner primarily by adjusting the amounts reinvested of principal payments received from securities held in the System Open Market Account (SOMA). Beginning on June 1, principal payments from securities held in the SOMA will be reinvested to the extent that they exceed monthly caps.

  • For Treasury securities, the cap will initially be set at $30 billion per month and after three months will increase to $60 billion per month. The decline in holdings of Treasury securities under this monthly cap will include Treasury coupon securities and, to the extent that coupon maturities are less than the monthly cap, Treasury bills.
  • For agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities, the cap will initially be set at $17.5 billion per month and after three months will increase to $35 billion per month.....

That is an idealized shrinkage of $1.583 billion per day.

Of course the roll-off of maturing paper won't be that smooth but that's what the $47.5 billion per month works out to. 

On June 1 the Fed had total assets of $8.915050 Trillion, the vast majority of which are U.S. Treasury bills, notes and bonds and Agency (Fannie and Freddie) Mortgage Backed Securities:



On July 20, the cut-off date for the most recent H.4.1 report, total assets on the Fed's balance sheet were $8.899213 Trillion, a reduction of $15.837 billion over the first 50 days of the program.

This compares with the idealized $79.16 billion reduction.

Here's the latest report with the two largest asset categories highlighted:

H.4.1

Factors Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions and Condition Statement of Federal Reserve Banks

July 21, 2022

 

1. Factors Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions

Millions of dollars

Reserve Bank credit, related items, and
reserve balances of depository institutions at
Federal Reserve Banks

Averages of daily figures

Wednesday
Jul 20, 2022

Week ended
Jul 20, 2022

Change from week ended

Jul 13, 2022

Jul 21, 2021

Reserve Bank credit

 8,870,097

+   11,230

+  695,866

 8,863,752

Securities held outright1

 8,467,758

+   10,982

+  827,775

 8,461,636

U.S. Treasury securities

 5,734,555

-   10,538

+  497,541

 5,733,027

Bills2

   326,044

         0

         0

   326,044

Notes and bonds, nominal2

 4,940,673

-    1,285

+  431,248

 4,940,459

Notes and bonds, inflation-indexed2

   376,094

-    8,248

+   30,178

   374,719

Inflation compensation3

    91,744

-    1,005

+   36,116

    91,806

Federal agency debt securities2

     2,347

         0

         0

     2,347

Mortgage-backed securities4

 2,730,856

+   21,520

+  330,234

 2,726,261

 

....MUCH MORE

As can be seen, the decrease in Treasury paper was more than offset by an increase in the agency stuff.

This is the second week in a row there has been an increase in total assets.

Mousing over the graph from the St. Louis Fed's FRED database total assets went from  $8.8958673 Trillion to 8.899213 Trillion, an increase of $3.346 billion on the week.

There may be a couple very serious implications of what we think we're seeing but we will wait for another week's worth of numbers before laying that out.

Previously: