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REPEAT: Fed's Yellen: Next Downturn Could Call for Asset Purch

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 23:30 GMT Oct 20/19:30 EST Oct 20
--Lower Neutral Rate Means Less Scope to Cut Rates in Next Downturn
--Will Likely Need to Restart Asset Purchases Again When Rates Near Zero
--Term Premia to Rise Only Gradually as Assets Roll Off
By Jean Yung
     WASHINGTON (MNI) - Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen warned Friday that it
wouldn't take another downturn on the scale of the Great Recession to drive
short-term interest rates back to zero, at which time the central bank will
likely need to redeploy unconventional policy tools such as asset purchases and
forward guidance. 
     With the estimated neutral rate of the federal funds rate at a historically
low level, "there will typically be less scope for the FOMC to reduce short-term
interest rates in response to an economic downturn, raising the possibility that
we may need to resort again to enhanced forward rate guidance and asset
purchases to provide needed accommodation," Yellen said in remarks prepared for
the National Economists Club in Washington. 
     "If we are indeed living in a low-neutral-rate world, a significantly less
severe economic downturn than the Great Recession might be sufficient to drive
short-term interest rates back to their effective lower bound," she said. 
     The Federal Open Market Committee last month revised lower its estimate of
the neutral rate to around 2.75%, compared to 4.25% just a few years ago. With
rates currently in the target range of 1.00% to 1.25%, there is not much room to
raise rates before monetary policy becomes contractionary. 
     Though the fed funds rate remains the Fed's primary policy tool, odds are
"uncomfortably high" that when rates have been slashed back to zero in the
future, the Fed would have to reach again for balance sheet tools. 
     Studies show that the Fed's large-scale asset purchases in the wake of the
financial crisis helped lower longer-term interests when rates were already at
the zero lower bound, Yellen noted. 
     As the economy recovered, the Fed began to scale back policy accommodation,
first by raising rates and then by allowing some reinvestments of maturing
assets to end starting this month. 
     With the process now under way, it is likely that the Fed's asset holdings
are "now depressing the term premium on the 10-year yield by somewhat less than
the 1 percentage point estimate reported for late last year," Yellen said. That
downward pressure will likely "diminish only gradually" through the roll-off
process and the Fed does not anticipate a jump in term premiums, she added. 
     It will take "some years" for the Fed's balance sheet to normalize via
runoff, she said. 
     Meanwhile, "we must recognize that our unconventional tools might have to
be used again" to provide additional policy accommodation after short-term
interest rates reached their effective lower bound, the chair said. 
     And upon sufficient recovery of labor markets and inflation, the Fed will
again need to scale back that accommodation, she said. 
--MNI Washington Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: jean.yung@marketnews.com
MNI Washington Bureau | +1 202-371-2121 | jean.yung@marketnews.com
MNI Washington Bureau | +1 202-371-2121 | jean.yung@marketnews.com

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