Fed to Start Paring Holdings, Keeps December Rate Rise on the Table -- Update

The Federal Reserve said Wednesday it would initiate in October its long-telegraphed plan to shrink the portfolio of bonds acquired after the 2008 crisis and left open the possibility of raising short-term interest rates by December.

The Fed left rates unchanged Wednesday, but the central bank penciled in one more rate rise this year, even though persistently low inflation has given some officials second thoughts about a move this year.

"We believe the recovery is on a strong track," Ms Yellen said at a news conference following the conclusion of the Fed's two-day policy meeting, explaining why officials expect to keep raising rates gradually in coming years.

The decision to reduce the bond portfolio has been signaled for months by the Fed, which is attempting to close the books on an unprecedented and sometimes controversial bond-buying experiment to support the U.S. economy and financial markets. The vote was unanimous.

The bigger question heading into this week's meeting centered on how the Fed would frame the debate over raising rates in December and beyond. Fed officials' newest economic projections indicated officials still largely expect to raise rates one more time this year.

But they showed slightly less urgency about the level of rates over the long run, and more officials now see the Fed undershooting its 2% inflation target for longer than they did in June, the last time they released economic projections.

Some 12 of 16 officials said they expected the Fed would need to raise rates at least one more time before the end of the year, the same as in June. Policy makers continued to expect three more rate increases next year, but only two more in 2019 and one in 2020.

The median projection for the longer-run level of interest rates also edged down to 2.75% in the latest projections, versus 3% in June. Officials released their projection of interest rates for 2020 for the first time, and they implied many officials see little need to raise rates after 2019.

The Fed has raised rates by a quarter percentage point four times since late 2015, most recently in June to a range between 1% and 1.25%, after keeping them near zero for seven years.

Since officials met in July, the unemployment rate has held near a 16-year low, but inflation has stayed soft, challenging the expectation of top officials, including Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen, that a deceleration in price pressures this spring would prove transitory.

While the labor market and economic output have largely performed in line with officials' expectations this year, inflation has been a puzzle. In recent years, factors such as a decline in commodities and energy prices, a stronger dollar and labor-market slack helped explain why inflation undershot the Fed's target, but those influences have faded and yet inflation hasn't rebounded.

The Fed's preferred annual inflation gauge, excluding volatile food and energy categories, stood at 1.4% in July, down from 1.9% in January and below the central bank's 2% target.

Officials boosted their projection of gross domestic product for this year. They now expect economic output to rise 2.4% this year, versus a projection of 2.2% in June, and they still expect the unemployment rate to fall to 4.3% this year. But they reduced their projection of core inflation to 1.5% for the end of this year, from 1.7% in June, and to 1.9% for the end of next year, versus 2% in June.

The Fed's postmeeting policy statement showed few changes to how officials view the economy's performance in recent months. Officials noted a recent upturn in business spending.

The Fed isn't expected to alter rates at its next meeting, Oct. 31-Nov. 1, leaving a mid-December policy meeting as the Fed's last scheduled chance to push rates higher this year. On Wednesday morning, traders in futures markets placed a 57% probability on a rate increase at the December meeting, according to CME Group. About 77% of economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal earlier this month said the Fed's next interest-rate increase would come in December.

The Fed will have several additional months of labor and inflation data before then, but those figures are likely to be distorted by recent hurricanes that hit Texas, Louisiana and Florida. In its postmeeting statement, the Fed said it expected storm-related disruptions and rebuilding would affect economic activity in the short run but not materially over the medium term, suggesting it wouldn't have a bearing on Fed policy decisions.

Meantime, the Fed has managed to formulate plans to shrink its $4.5 trillion portfolio of bonds and other assets without provoking much concern from investors. How Ms. Yellen navigates this final chapter could shape how future policy makers view the relative merits of the bond-buying episodes in subsequent downturns and could offer a road map for other central banks, especially the European Central Bank, that are preparing their own retreat.

Markets haven't reacted much to the plans in part because other central banks are still buying government bonds and other assets and because the Fed has communicated a plan to gradually remove their support. Beginning in October, the Fed will end its practice of fully reinvesting the principal payments of maturing into new bonds and instead allow $10 billion in holdings to roll off without reinvestment every month. Those amounts will increase by $10 billion each quarter to a maximum of $50 billion.

"Our balance sheet will decline gradually and predictably," Ms. Yellen said at the news conference.

One irony of the Fed's latest low-inflation predicament is that many critics of the bond-buying programs -- particularly the second and third rounds launched in 2010 and 2012, respectively -- warned they would lead to runaway inflation and currency debasement. Now that the Fed is winding down those programs, the future of rate increases remains clouded by doubts over why inflation isn't stronger.

In each of the last two years, Fed officials have sketched out several rate increases, but lifted rates just once at the end of each year. This year has been different because of a synchronized upturn in global growth and easing financial conditions that have sent stocks to new records while bond yields, which ran up sharply after President Donald Trump's election last year, have drifted back down.

The combination of relatively stable economic projections and a lower interest-rate outlook shows Fed officials have concluded the economy either can't withstand or won't need very high interest rates, even to achieve the modest growth and low inflation officials currently anticipate.

In June, Ms. Yellen said inflation appeared to be soft due to transitory factors, including one-off declines for a handful of items such as wireless phone plans and prescription drugs. In July, she said that was still her expectation, but she qualified her statement with a nod to the inherent uncertainty.

"We believe this year's shortfall in inflation primarily reflects developments that are largely unrelated to broader economic conditions," Ms. Yellen said Wednesday. With the labor market continuing to strengthen, officials "continue to expect inflation to move up."

Still, the recent downturn served as a reminder that officials' understanding of inflation dynamics "is not perfect," she added

Write to Nick Timiraos at nick.timiraos@wsj.com

WASHINGTON -- The Federal Reserve said Wednesday it would initiate in October its long-telegraphed plan to shrink the portfolio of bonds acquired after the 2008 crisis and left open the possibility of raising short-term interest rates by December.

The Fed left rates unchanged Wednesday, but the central bank penciled in one more rate rise in 2017, even though persistently low inflation has given some officials second thoughts about a move this year.

"We believe the recovery is on a strong track," Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen said at a news conference following the conclusion of the Fed's two-day policy meeting, explaining why officials expect to keep raising rates gradually in coming years.

The decision to reduce the bond portfolio has been signaled for months by the Fed, which is attempting to close the books on an unprecedented and sometimes controversial bond-buying experiment to support the U.S. economy and financial markets. The vote was unanimous.

"The basic message here is U.S. economic performance has been good," Ms. Yellen said. "The American people should feel the steps we have taken to normalize monetary policy...are well justified given the very substantial progress we've seen in the economy."

The bigger question this week centered on how the Fed would frame the debate over raising rates in December and beyond. Fed officials' newest economic projections indicated officials still largely expect to raise rates one more time this year.

But they showed slightly less urgency about the level of rates over the long run, and more officials now see the Fed undershooting its 2% inflation target for longer than they did in June, the last time they released economic projections.

Some 12 of 16 officials said they expected the Fed would need to raise rates at least one more time before year-end, the same as in June. Policy makers continued to expect three more rate increases next year, two more in 2019 and one in 2020.

The median projection for the longer-run level of interest rates also edged down to 2.75% in the latest projections, versus 3% in June. Officials released their projection of interest rates for 2020 for the first time, and they implied many officials see little need to raise rates after 2019.

The Fed has raised rates by a quarter percentage point four times since late 2015, most recently in June to a range between 1% and 1.25%, after keeping them near zero for seven years.

Since officials met in July, the unemployment rate has held near a 16-year low, but inflation has stayed soft, challenging the expectation of top officials, including Ms. Yellen, that a deceleration in price pressures this spring would prove transitory.

While the labor market and economic output have largely performed in line with officials' expectations this year, inflation has been a puzzle. In recent years, factors such as a decline in commodities and energy prices, a stronger dollar and labor-market slack helped explain why inflation undershot the Fed's target, but those influences have faded and yet inflation hasn't rebounded.

The Fed's preferred annual inflation gauge, excluding volatile food and energy categories, stood at 1.4% in July, down from 1.9% in January and below the central bank's 2% target.

Officials boosted their projection of gross domestic product for this year. They now expect economic output to rise 2.4%, versus a projection of 2.2% in June, and they still expect the unemployment rate to fall to 4.3% this year. But they reduced their projection of core inflation to 1.5% for the end of this year, from 1.7% in June, and to 1.9% for the end of next year, versus 2% in June.

The Fed's postmeeting policy statement showed few changes to how officials view the economy's performance in recent months. Officials noted a recent upturn in business spending.

The Fed isn't expected to alter rates at its next meeting, Oct. 31-Nov. 1, leaving a mid-December policy meeting as the Fed's last scheduled chance to push rates higher this year. On Wednesday morning, traders in futures markets placed a 57% probability on a rate increase at the December meeting, according to CME Group. About 77% of economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal this month said the Fed's next interest-rate increase would come in December.

The Fed will have several additional months of labor and inflation data before then, but those figures are likely to be distorted by recent hurricanes that hit Texas, Louisiana and Florida. In its postmeeting statement, the Fed said it expected storm-related disruptions and rebuilding would affect economic activity in the short run but not materially over the medium term, suggesting it wouldn't have a bearing on Fed policy decisions.

Meantime, the Fed has managed to formulate plans to shrink its $4.5 trillion portfolio of bonds and other assets without provoking much concern from investors. How Ms. Yellen navigates this final chapter could shape how future policy makers view the relative merits of the bond-buying episodes in subsequent downturns and could offer a road map for other central banks, especially the European Central Bank, that are preparing their own retreat.

Markets haven't reacted much to the plans in part because other central banks are still buying government bonds and other assets and because the Fed has communicated a plan to gradually remove their support. Beginning in October, the Fed will end its practice of fully reinvesting the principal payments of maturing into new bonds and instead allow $10 billion in holdings to roll off without reinvestment every month. Those amounts will increase by $10 billion each quarter to a maximum of $50 billion.

"Our balance sheet will decline gradually and predictably," Ms. Yellen said at the news conference.

One irony of the Fed's latest low-inflation predicament is that many critics of the bond-buying programs -- particularly the second and third rounds launched in 2010 and 2012, respectively -- warned they would lead to runaway inflation and currency debasement. Now that the Fed is winding down those programs, the future of rate increases remains clouded by doubts over why inflation isn't stronger.

In each of the past two years, Fed officials have sketched out several rate increases, but lifted rates just once at the end of each year. This year has been different because of a synchronized upturn in global growth and easing financial conditions that have sent stocks to new records while bond yields, which ran up sharply after President Donald Trump's election last year, have drifted back down.

The combination of relatively stable economic projections and a lower interest-rate outlook shows Fed officials have concluded the economy either can't withstand or won't need very high interest rates, even to achieve the modest growth and low inflation officials anticipate.

In June, Ms. Yellen said inflation appeared to be soft due to transitory factors, including one-off declines for a handful of items such as wireless phone plans and prescription drugs. In July, she said that was still her expectation, but she qualified her statement with a nod to the inherent uncertainty.

"We believe this year's shortfall in inflation primarily reflects developments that are largely unrelated to broader economic conditions," Ms. Yellen said Wednesday. With the labor market continuing to strengthen, officials "continue to expect inflation to move up."

Still, the recent downturn served as a reminder that officials' understanding of inflation dynamics "is not perfect," she added.

Write to Nick Timiraos at nick.timiraos@wsj.com

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

September 20, 2017 16:20 ET (20:20 GMT)