Fed Balance Sheet Now Exceeds $8.5T
This article first appeared on SchiffGold.
The Fed balance sheet stands at $8.56T, up $108B from the prior month-end, but down in the past week by $8.7B. The chart below shows how the Fed Balance sheet has grown by instrument over the last 18 months.
The Fed autopilot buying targets about $120B in monthly purchases split by $40B in MBS and $80B in US Treasuries. As the numbers show, this is not exact, but an approximation. The latest month added $33B in MBS and almost $82B in Treasuries, offset by “Other” dropping $7B.
The Fed has not purchased at least $120B since July and has actually been slowing their net purchases since June. Is it possible the Fed has done a quiet mini-taper to see how the market reacts to the withdrawal of liquidity? If so, interest rates have creeped up and the yield curve has actually started to flatten. Not a good sign given the paltry “taper” that has occurred so far!
The chart below shows interest rates on 2, 5, and 10 year maturities this year. Interest rates have moved up quickly since mid-September even when the Debt Ceiling was still in place. What happens if/when the Fed has to taper more aggressively?
The “taper” so far has been in the $5-$10B range. This should not be enough to move the multi-trillion dollar treasury market. Still though, when you compare the chart above to the chart below, it is hard to ignore the correlation between Fed buying and interest rate moves. Is the rest of the market responding to the actions of the Fed this closely? If the small deceleration is even having a marginal effect, imagine what a full taper could do to the overall market!
The table below shows the breakdown of holdings by instrument and the period over period change as indicated. The main takeaways:
It’s hard to know for sure if Fed buying is having that much impact on the market because there are so many factors at play. However, if the Fed buying less short term debt led to the shrinking spread, that means the Fed is having a large impact on the treasury market. This will spell trouble as tapering is set to begin within a few weeks. It will be interesting to see what part of the yield curve the Fed tapers first.
Balance Sheet Holdings by Period | Change in Balance Sheet by Period | ||||||||
Category | Current | 1 Week | 1 Month | 1 Year | 3 Years | 1 Week Change | 1 Month Change | 1 Year Change | 3 Year Change |
Treasury Debt | |||||||||
Maturity < 1yr | 1,092.5 | 1,092.5 | 1,075.6 | 1,000.9 | 403.8 | 0.0 | 16.9 | 91.6 | 688.7 |
Maturity 1-5 | 2,113.8 | 2,108.8 | 2,093.3 | 1,710.2 | 985.4 | 5.0 | 20.5 | 403.6 | 1,128.4 |
Maturity 5-10 | 1,006.7 | 1,001.5 | 981.8 | 809.3 | 264.1 | 5.2 | 24.9 | 197.4 | 742.6 |
Maturity 10+ | 1,300.4 | 1,296.5 | 1,280.4 | 1,006.8 | 617.2 | 3.9 | 20.0 | 293.6 | 683.2 |
Other | |||||||||
MBS | 2,527.8 | 2,546.9 | 2,494.7 | 2,000.3 | 1,669.0 | -19.1 | 33.1 | 527.5 | 858.8 |
Other | 515.1 | 518.7 | 522.2 | 618.8 | 200.3 | -3.6 | -7.1 | -103.7 | 314.8 |
Total | |||||||||
All | 8,556.2 | 8,564.9 | 8,448.0 | 7,146.3 | 4,139.7 | -8.7 | 108.2 | 1,409.9 | 4,416.5 |
The chart below shows the relative (percent) distribution by product. While absolute values have increased quite significantly as shown in the table above, the distribution of holdings has only changed some. MBS made up 40% of the balance sheet 3 years ago, but the number has fallen to under 30% as short term (<1 year) and medium term (5-10 years) has increased from 10% to 14% and 6.4% to 11.8% respectively. These numbers continue to move up each month.
Another chart to look at is the weekly change in the balance sheet. Anyone who follows the balance sheet closely, will notice it dips once a month before jumping back up. The chart below shows how the fed balance sheet changes week over week. As seen, there are a few consistent trends:
The latest week saw $19B in MBS mature versus $52B purchased last week.
The table below shows how the latest week compares to the weekly averages over 4, 24, 52, and 156 (3 years) weeks. The weekly averages are shown to gauge whether the current periods (1 and 4 weeks) are accelerating or decelerating.
The Fed has averaged about $27B per week for 4 weeks which is less than the $30B and $27.1B over 24 and 52 weeks. There were 5 weeks in September which could be slightly skewing some of the numbers.
Weekly Average Change Over Indicated Time Period | |||||
Category | 1 Week | 4 Weeks | 24 Weeks | 52 Weeks | 3 Year |
Treasury Debt | |||||
Maturity < 1yr | 14 | 4,221 | 2,459 | 1,761 | 4,415 |
Maturity 1-5 | 5,012 | 5,132 | 6,908 | 7,762 | 7,234 |
Maturity 5-10 | 5,163 | 6,227 | 3,988 | 3,795 | 4,760 |
Maturity 10+ | 3,871 | 4,988 | 5,768 | 5,646 | 4,380 |
Other | |||||
MBS | -19,155 | 8,273 | 14,019 | 10,144 | 5,505 |
Other | -3,667 | -1,792 | -2,911 | -1,995 | 2,018 |
Total | |||||
All | -8,762 | 27,050 | 30,230 | 27,113 | 28,311 |
Data as of: 2021-10-27. Values are in Millions of dollars. |
The Fed is clearly monetizing US Debt. The chart below uses data from the debt analysis and matches it up with the Fed balance sheet holdings. While this is not a perfect one to one match due to the nature of reporting, the outcome can be seen below. This chart focuses specifically on Treasury securities: Bills (<1 Year maturity), Notes (1-10 year), and Bonds (10+ years). This is the bulk of debt issuance and Fed purchases.
As can be seen below the Fed has monetized a large percentage of debt issued since Jan 2020. The focus is clearly seen in Notes and Bonds to keep a lid on long term rates. The first chart shows the debt added by the Treasury in each of the last 4 years by instrument. This shows very clearly how the Treasury has been rolling short term debt to long term debt in 2021.
The bottom chart shows the percent of that debt the Fed has purchased. In 2020, the Fed monetized more than 100% of notes and 90% of bonds. In 2021 those numbers have fallen to 32% and 45% respectively.
Who is going to absorb all this debt issuance if the Fed tapers? Who can absorb almost half of the long term debt the Treasury will be issuing for the foreseeable future? This is why the Fed will be so delicate with tapering and inevitably increase it as spending in Washington continues unabated!
The final plot below takes a larger view of the balance sheet. It is clear to see how the usage of the balance sheet has changed since the Global Financial Crisis. The tapering from 2017-2019 can be seen in the slight dip before the massive surge due to Covid.
There is no way the Fed will come close to shrinking the balance sheet at this stage. With more Fiscal spending on the horizon and an economy addicted to low interest rates, it is probable that the growth of the balance sheet may accelerate rather than decelerate.
The Fed is in a box. They cannot let interest rates rise or else the entire economy will come crumbling down, but if they keep the monetary stimulus flowing then inflation will most likely spiral. As shown above, they have monetized a huge amount of the US Debt this year (~40%). The government needs this monetary support or else rising long term rates will put pressure on the Federal Deficit.
The Fed can talk about tapering and even make attempts to do so, but they will inevitably reverse course and begin expanding their balance sheet by more than $120B a month. This will continue driving the Money Supply higher putting downward pressure on the dollar and upward pressure on inflation. Do they have the tools to fight inflation? Absolutely. But the implications of doing so are so politically devastating that they will choose higher inflation over a collapsing economy. Gold and silver will provide excellent protection during this time.
Data Source: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/WALCL and https://fred.stlouisfed.org/release/tables?rid=20&eid=840849#snid=840941
Data Updated: Weekly, Thursday at 4:30 PM Eastern
Last Updated: Oct 27, 2021
Interactive charts and graphs can always be found on the Exploring Finance dashboard: https://exploringfinance.shinyapps.io/USDebt/