New York Fed’s Remache says elevated Fed bond buying to continue until mid-April

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 โ€Œunclear what happens after the annual tax filing date has passed, an official โ€Œwho helps manage the implementation of monetary policy at the New York Fed said…


New York Fed’s Remache says elevated Fed bond buying to continue until mid-April
New York Fed’s Remache says elevated Fed bond buying to continue until mid-April

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 โ€Œunclear what happens after the annual tax filing date has passed, an official โ€Œwho helps manage the implementation of monetary policy at the New York Fed said on Thursday.

The official, Julie Remache, โ€‹who 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 โ€Œshort-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 โ€‹used to โ€‹help stabilize markets and provide stimulus during troubled โ€‹times.

Remache noted that officials responsible for โ€Œimplementing monetary policy expect โ€œpurchases 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 โ€œgradual additionโ€ of reserves to the financial system.

โ€œAfter mid-April, we anticipate the amount of purchases to be reduced substantially,โ€ Remache said. Once the buying slows, โ€œmonthly purchase amounts will likely vary based on the outlook โ€Œfor reserves supply and demand, judgment about market conditions, โ€‹and how these are expected to evolve.โ€

It is unclear โ€‹how much the Fed will need โ€‹to buy once mid-April has passed, Remache said. โ€œThere is notable uncertainty about โ€Œhow demand for Fed liabilities will evolve โ€‹and how that might โ€‹impact 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 โ€‹while allowing for normal money โ€Œmarket volatility. The Fed shrank its holdings from 2022 into late last year โ€‹as it sought to extinguish liquidity added during the COVID-19 pandemic.

(Reporting by Michael โ€‹S. Derby in New YorkEditing by Matthew Lewis)

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