By Michael S. Derby
Feb 12 (Reuters) – The Federal Reserve is on track to continue forward with sizable Treasury bill buying into the spring but it is โunclear what happens after the annual tax filing date has passed, an official โwho helps manage the implementation of monetary policy at the New York Fed said on Thursday.
The official, Julie Remache, โwho is deputy system open market account manager and head of market and portfolio analysis at the regional Fed bank, was addressing the outlook for so-called reserve management purchases the central bank launched in December.
The Fed is currently buying around $40 billion per month in Treasury bills and other โshort-term government bonds to rebuild โ reserves in the financial system and manage liquidity needs as the annual tax filing date approaches in mid-April. It is also buying other government โ bonds to help manage the size of Fed holdings, with overall SOMA holdings now at $6.2 trillion.
Fed officials say the buying is purely technical and distinct from the kind of purchases the Fed has โused to โhelp stabilize markets and provide stimulus during troubled โtimes.
Remache noted that officials responsible for โimplementing monetary policy expect โpurchases to remain around elevated levels until mid-Aprilโ and that the buying, in addition to liquidity provided by Fed rate-control facilities, will lead to a โgradual additionโ of reserves to the financial system.
โAfter mid-April, we anticipate the amount of purchases to be reduced substantially,โ Remache said. Once the buying slows, โmonthly purchase amounts will likely vary based on the outlook โfor reserves supply and demand, judgment about market conditions, โand how these are expected to evolve.โ
It is unclear โhow much the Fed will need โto buy once mid-April has passed, Remache said. โThere is notable uncertainty about โhow demand for Fed liabilities will evolve โand how that might โimpact the appropriate supply of reserves.โ
The Fed reckons that keeping the right amount of reserves in the financial system ensures firm control over its interest rate target range โwhile allowing for normal money โmarket volatility. The Fed shrank its holdings from 2022 into late last year โas it sought to extinguish liquidity added during the COVID-19 pandemic.
(Reporting by Michael โS. Derby in New YorkEditing by Matthew Lewis)



