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Abstract
The Federal Reserve’s purchase of large quantities of assets from the private sector between November 2008 and September 2014, known as quantitative easing, resulted in the Fed’s ownership of $1.77 trillion of agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and $2.45 trillion of U.S. Treasury securities as of September 2017. In October 2017, the Fed began to reduce these holdings. This brief examines the plans to reduce these holdings and the impact these actions will have on the MBS market. The authors show that both MBS and Treasuries will run off less quickly than the targeted run-off amounts, and that under similar assumptions to what the Fed has used, there will still be about $1.18 trillion of MBS on its books when the Fed balance sheet normalizes. They also argue that the Fed may want to take advantage of its remaining reinvestment period to do some minor rebalancing. Moreover, the Fed can take additional action at no cost that will help launch the single government-sponsored enterprise security.
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