03-18-2009, 10:15 AM
<b>Bernanke May Need to Ramp Up Fedâs Asset Purchases (Update2)
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By Craig Torres
March 17 (Bloomberg) -- Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Federal Reserve policy makers may have to ramp up their purchases of mortgage securities and other assets after the economy and job market deteriorated further since they last met.
The Federal Open Market Committee, gathering today and tomorrow in Washington, needs to redouble its efforts after the central bankâs balance sheet shrank 17 percent from a $2.3 trillion December peak, Fed watchers said. The retreat came even as Bernanke acknowledged the chance that the unemployment rate will exceed 10 percent for the first time in a quarter century.
âIt takes massive balance-sheet expansion to generate significant easing in financial conditions,â said Andrew Tilton, an economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York who used to work at the Treasury. âMore needs to be done.â
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This weekâs FOMC meeting could mark a shift toward more aggressive monetary expansion to fight deflation after demand waned for many of the Fedâs existing programs. One top consideration is an increase in the pace and size of a $600 billion program to buy bonds issued and backed by U.S. housing agencies such as Fannie Mae, analysts said.
</b>
</b>
By Craig Torres
March 17 (Bloomberg) -- Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Federal Reserve policy makers may have to ramp up their purchases of mortgage securities and other assets after the economy and job market deteriorated further since they last met.
The Federal Open Market Committee, gathering today and tomorrow in Washington, needs to redouble its efforts after the central bankâs balance sheet shrank 17 percent from a $2.3 trillion December peak, Fed watchers said. The retreat came even as Bernanke acknowledged the chance that the unemployment rate will exceed 10 percent for the first time in a quarter century.
âIt takes massive balance-sheet expansion to generate significant easing in financial conditions,â said Andrew Tilton, an economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York who used to work at the Treasury. âMore needs to be done.â
<b>
This weekâs FOMC meeting could mark a shift toward more aggressive monetary expansion to fight deflation after demand waned for many of the Fedâs existing programs. One top consideration is an increase in the pace and size of a $600 billion program to buy bonds issued and backed by U.S. housing agencies such as Fannie Mae, analysts said.
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