U.S. Economy

Fed Starts Experiment of Tackling $8.9 Trillion Portfolio to Shrink

According to Bloomberg, the U.S. Federal Reserve is about to start shrinking its $8.9 trillion balance sheet, deploying a second tool alongside higher interest rates to curb inflation, though officials don’t know just how effective it will be.

According to Bloomberg, the U.S. Federal Reserve is about to start shrinking its $8.9 trillion balance sheet, deploying a second tool alongside higher interest rates to curb inflation, though officials don’t know just how effective it will be.

After doubling in size through asset purchases in the first two years of the pandemic, the balance sheet will be reduced at a pace that’s almost twice as fast as after the last financial crisis. While the process officially commences on Wednesday, the first US Treasury securities won’t run off until $15 billion mature on June 15.

The Fed is capping monthly runoff at $47.5 billion -- $30 billion for Treasuries and $17.5 billion for mortgage-backed securities -- until September. Those thresholds will then double to a combined $95 billion. That compares to a peak of $50 billion a month when the Fed performed the exercise starting in 2017.

Four Treasury securities held by the Fed are maturing in June, totaling $48.25 billion, leaving $18.25 billion over the $30 billion runoff cap to be reinvested.

International

'Delusional': UN Chief Slams New Fossil Fuel Funding and Warns of Climate Chaos

The U.N. Secretary General has slammed new funding for fossil fuel exploration, describing it as "delusional" and calling for an abandonment of fossil fuel finance.

International

China Weighs Reviving Jack Ma’s Ant IPO as Crackdown Eases

Chinese financial regulators have started early stage discussions on a potential revival of Ant Group Co.’s IPO,

Investing Ideas

Why Advanced Micro Devices Rose 19.1% in May

Advanced Micro Devices’s high-performance computing and visualization products help gamers get the most from their favorite titles, and over the past five years, the most out of investors' portfolios.