The last time they shrank the balance sheet, the Fed set caps allowing holdings to run off at US$50 billion a month -- US$30 billion in Treasuries and US$20 billion in mortgage-backed securities, phased in over a year -- but officials have said they expect to go faster this time around.
In March, the Federal Open Market Committee raised its benchmark interest rate by just a quarter point against a backdrop of Russia’s war in Ukraine and the fastest inflation in four decades. Since then, price pressures have only mounted, and labor market data has shown solid employment growth and an acceleration in wages.
The US added close to half a million jobs in March and the unemployment rate fell more than expected, according to government data on Friday. Those figures followed separate data showing a 6.4% jump in the personal expenditures price index, which the Fed uses for its inflation target.
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Fed Governor Lael Brainard will participate in a Minneapolis Fed-hosted virtual discussion on inflation on Tuesday. It’s her first speech in months as she awaits Senate confirmation for the post of Fed vice chair.