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24 May 2017
FOMC minutes: Fed policymakers agreed that details of balance sheet plan should be announced soon, with start of reductions appropriate this year
The minutes from the May (2nd & 3rd) Federal Reserve’s monetary policy meeting have been published, highlighting that nearly all Fed policymakers expressed a favorable view of the staff proposal as a way to reduce central bank holdings in a gradual and predictable manner.
Key headlines (via Reuters):
- U.S. Federal reserve policymakers said "Prudent" to wait for further evidence that recent weak economic data was transitory before raising interest rates again -minutes from may 2-3 meeting
- Fed officials said they expected weakness would pass and that it would "Soon be appropriate" to raise rates if those expectations were met
- Fed staff presented plan to set gradually increasing limits on balance sheet reinvestment that would start low and be raised every three months over a set period of time until fully phased in
- Nearly all fed policymakers expressed a favorable view of the staff proposal as a way to reduce central bank holdings in a gradual and predictable manner
- Fed policymakers agreed that details of balance sheet plan should be announced soon, with start of reductions appropriate this year
- Most fed officials viewed recent soft inflation as "Transitory," though a few raised concerns that progress toward the central bank's 2 percent target had slowed
- Many fed officials said they continued to see possible upside risks from an expansionary u.S. Fiscal policy, but noted uncertainty around outcome of trump administration economic proposals
- In general, fed officials said their assessment of the economy had changed little since the march policy meeting, with the labor market continuing to improve and risks from the global economy receding
- Fed officials said they expected a rebound in consumer spending in coming months in light of solid economic fundamentals
- Fed officials said they saw near-term risks to the economic outlook as roughly balanced, though several noted global geopolitical uncertainty and possible emerging market strains as u.S. Rates rise