El-Erian Sees Fed Focused on Balance Sheet Flexibility 'Like a Laser'

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve released its minutes from its Jan. 29-30 policy meeting in which it voted unanimously to hold its policy rate in a range between 2.25 percent and 2.5 percent. “Patience” has been a constant buzzword in the Fed’s vocabulary as of late and in the minutes released, leaning towards a patient approach to interest rates was confirmed.

“Participants pointed to a variety of considerations that supported a patient approach to monetary policy at this juncture as an appropriate step in managing various risks and uncertainties in the outlook,” the meeting said.

Investors and traders alike were no doubt dissecting the Fed minutes to extrapolate their own interpretations from it.

A separate statement last month alluded to a more flexible Fed that would be more strategic with regard to its balance sheet policy. Furthermore, flexibility would also apply to its holdings of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities, which signaled a diversion from statements that the central bank would resume its asset purchases if economic data warranted a rate cut.

In the actual minutes, it was almost unanimous that a reduction in assets would come prior to the end of 2019. The markets were keen on the central bank’s holdings of $3.8 trillion in bonds, which it has steadily been reducing since October 2017.

“Almost all participants thought that it would be desirable to announce before too long a plan to stop reducing the Federal Reserve’s asset holdings later this year. Such an announcement would provide more certainty about the process for completing the normalization of the size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet,” the document said.

January’s decision to keep rates flat came as the Fed obstinately stuck with a rate-hiking measure in 2018 with four increases in the federal funds rate. Given the current economic landscape, that appears to have changed.

In the video below, Bloomberg Opinion columnist Mohamed El-Erian, Krishna Memani, chief investment officer at OppenheimerFunds, and Bloomberg’s Lisa Abramowicz discuss expectations for the latest Federal Reserve meeting minutes. They speak with Bloomberg’s Jonathan Ferro on “Bloomberg Markets: The Open.” El-Erian’s opinions are his own.

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