Throwing shade on interest rate path

A week that begins with a total solar eclipse darkening skies coast to coast will end with investors hoping for fewer shadows from the Federal Reserve.

Central banking elites from around the globe and leading economic thinkers will gather at the end of the week ahead for a symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyo., annually sponsored by the Kansas City Federal Reserve.

The Federal Reserve has long been expected to soon begin unwinding its balance sheet, which will involve slowly selling off bonds it bought in the years after the end of the Great Recession. It did that with the aim of driving long-term interest rates down and, in turn, kick-starting the economy.

The Fed hasn't set a specific schedule for when and how it will embark on reducing its holdings of mortgage-backed bonds and other securities but it will aim to do it methodically and marginally so as not to flood the bond market and risk sharply higher long-term interest rates.

While there seems to be consensus over reducing its $4.5 trillion stockpile of bonds, there appears to be a growing split over the Fed's plan regarding short-term interest rates. The group has raised its target interest rate twice this year and has been expected to hike it once more. But stubbornly low inflation has seeded concerns by some insiders that the central bank is working to slow the economy at a time when it doesn't need to be, according to minutes of the Fed's Open Market Committee Meeting last month.

Such discussion creates shadows on what had been a clear path.

 

ABOUT THE WRITER

Financial journalist Tom Hudson hosts "The Sunshine Economy" on WLRN-FM in Miami, where he is the vice president of news. He is the former co-anchor and managing editor of "Nightly Business Report" on public television. Follow him on Twitter HudsonsView.

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