San Diego,
Jan 14: The Federal Reserve could halt its asset purchases this year,
two top Fed officials suggested, a view also gaining traction among economists
at Wall Street's top financial institutions.
St. Louis Fed President
James Bullard, a voting member of the Fed's monetary policy panel in 2013, said
a drop in the unemployment rate to 7.1 percent would probably constitute the
"substantial improvement" in the labor market that the central bank seeks.
That's the bar for the Fed's policy-setting committee to halt the
current round of asset purchases that it began in September. The Fed is
currently buying $40 billion in mortgage-backed securities and $45 billion in
Treasuries each month in a bid to push down borrowing costs and spark faster
growth.
"If we get even moderately good growth this year I would expect
unemployment to continue to tick down," Bullard later told reporters. "I would
say that that would put the committee in a good position to think about doing a
pause with the balance sheet policy."
Bullard also acknowledged that he
had a more optimistic view on unemployment than some other Fed officials, and
sees it in the "low 7's" by year-end.
Thousands of economists have
gathered in San Diego for the annual American Economic Association meeting,
drawing some of the biggest names in the profession as well as top
policymakers.
Bullard stressed that the Fed would decide about changing
its bond-buying program on the basis of the outlook for the labor market, and
said that if it decided to pause, and then saw conditions weaken, it might
resume the purchases.
The Fed has also promised to keep interest rates at
their current near-zero level until unemployment drops to 6.5 percent, as long
as inflation does not threaten to rise above 2.5 percent.
Philadelphia
Fed Bank President Charles Plosser, who spoke separately at the conference, said
he expects unemployment to drop to between 6.8 percent and 7.0 percent by the
end of 2013.
As a result, he hopes the Fed will stop buying bonds before
the 6.5 percent threshold, implying he anticipates the asset purchases could
halt this year. Unemployment registered 7.8 percent last
month.
Economists at nine of 16 primary dealers -- the large financial
institutions that do business directly with the Fed – said they expect the Fed
to end its Treasuries purchases in 2013.
Fed policymakers are
increasingly concerned about the impact of their monthly purchases, which
currently total $85 billion.
Minutes from their December policy meeting
showed that "several" top officials expected to slow or stop the so-called
quantitative easing program, dubbed QE3, "well before" the end of the year -
news that surprised some on Wall Street and prompted a drop in stocks and bonds,
and a rise in the dollar.
Meanwhile, another top Fed official warned the
U.S. central bank's aggressive easing plan threatens the Fed's
credibility.
Jeffrey Lacker, president of the Richmond Fed, held his
ground opposing QE3, arguing that continued monetary policy is not the
appropriate way to tackle the problem.
"It is unlikely that the Federal
Reserve can push real growth rates materially higher than they otherwise would
be, on a sustained basis," Lacker, who dissented on all Fed easing moves last
year, told a meeting of the Maryland Bankers Association.
The U.S.
economy expanded 3.1 percent in the third quarter on an annualized basis, but
growth is believed to have slowed sharply to barely above 1.0 percent in the
last three months of the year.
"I see an increased risk, given the course
the committee has set, that inflation pressures emerge and are not thwarted in a
timely way," he said.
Bullard, speaking on a panel in San Diego, warned
that central bankers, in fighting to stabilize financial markets, have
sacrificed some of their cherished independence, an attribute many Fed
historians and policymakers argue is key to keeping inflation under
control.
Bullard singled out the European Central Bank as one of the
worst offenders, but warned more broadly about the "creeping politicization" of
central banking globally -- something that he said would deliver disappointing
economic results.
While Lacker and Plosser are outspoken policy hawks,
Bullard is more of a centrist who is nonetheless toward the hawkish end of the
spectrum of Fed officials. The three were the first top central bank officials
to speak publicly since the minutes were unveiled.
After the December
meeting, the Fed said it would continue buying bonds until the labor market
outlook improves "substantially," which Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has
characterized as a "sustained" decline in the unemployment
rate.
Government data released showed the U.S. jobless rate held steady
from November to December. Bullard called the December jobs number - a boost of
155,000 in new non-farm jobs - "reasonably good.
Fed Vice Chair Janet
Yellen, a proponent of aggressive Fed easing, also spoke at the conference, but
confined her comments to how regulators are tackling risks to financial
stability.
Ends
SA/EN
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Fed officials suggest possible end to asset purchases in 2013
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