‘Fed Put’ Back on the Table: What That Means for the Market

 | May 06, 2024 02:49

Last week was big for macro and markets.

Today’s piece is going to cover:

  • The Fed’s dovish announcement: a sizeable tapering of their Quantitative Tightening program;

  • A potential upcoming shift in market dynamics: for the first time in a while the reflation thesis was challenged by a weaker suite of data clashing versus the very optimistic 5% economist expectation for 2024 US nominal GDP growth;

''Beginning in June, the Committee will slow the pace of decline of its securities holdings by reducing the monthly redemption cap on Treasury securities from $60 billion to $25 billion.''

With this sentence, the Fed announced the tapering of their QT program last week.

The Federal Reserve has been running QT (Quantitative Tightening) since mid-2022: this process is aimed at unwinding the multi-trillion Fed bond holdings accumulated during previous QE episodes.

The Fed doesn't sell bonds back to the market, but it merely allows them to roll over its balance sheet without reinvesting the full maturing notional.

Summing up Treasuries and other bonds, the Fed was allowing $95 billion of bonds (60bn USTs + 35bn MBS) to roll-over its balance sheet each month.

To be more accurate though, QT was actually running at about ~75bn/month.

That’s because the loans underneath the Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) sitting on the Fed balance sheet are being repaid slowly due to high-interest rates hampering mortgage refinancing activities, and so MBS maturities are only ~15bn/month.

See this excellent chart from Michael Gray: