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Fed leaves policy unchanged, Sep balance sheet announcement likely - ING

Analysts at ING explained that the Federal Reserve has left interest rates unchanged and suggests "gradual" policy tightening will continue. 

Key Quotes:

"They are edging towards a September announcement on reducing the size of the balance sheet.

The US Federal Reserve has left monetary policy unchanged at today’s meeting. The fed funds rate is to be kept in a 1 to 1.25% target range. The accompanying statement is little changed to the one issued in June with the Fed still believing inflation will “stabilize around the Committee’s 2% objective over the medium term” despite remaining “somewhat below 2% in the near term”. As a result, they continue to anticipate “gradual increases in the federal funds rate”.

The Fed also offered a bit more information on the balance sheet reduction strategy. Having ballooned to $4.5 trillion thanks to QE, the Federal Reserve is keen to get this down and has already announced a plan of gradually limiting the reinvestment of proceeds of maturing assets. The only question has been the timing. This statement suggests it will begin “relatively soon”, whereas previously they had merely said it will begin “this year”. We look for the September FOMC meeting to formally say that balance sheet reduction will start in October. 

Assuming we are correct right, our debt strategists estimate that only $197bn of the $425bn in maturing Treasuries in 2018 would still be reinvested. With the market having to absorb more Treasuries we think there is some complacency regarding the potential for higher longer dated yields and a steeper yield curve.

In terms of the outlook for interest rates, the Fed (as of last month) was still indicating it expected to raise interest rates four times over the next 18 months – a total of 1 percentage point. This is in stark contrast to the market which is pricing in barely one 25bp move over the same period. The softer activity and inflation figures combined with the likelihood of a September balance sheet announcement means that December seems the earliest opportunity for the next rate move and we think it will happen. 

Looking further ahead, we still forecast two rate rises in 2018, anticipating reasonable 2-2.5% GDP growth over the next year and a likelihood that inflation will gradually return to target, helped by a tight labour market and the prospect of a gradual uptick in wage growth. Recent comments on asset price valuations (“somewhat rich” according to Janet Yellen and equities “running very much on fumes” according to San Francisco Fed President Williams) and loose financial conditions (fairly flat yield curve and dollar softness) suggest Fed officials are broadening out their reasoning for tighter monetary policy. For the market though, they will need to see the data improve before they will be convinced."

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