Key Takeaways
- Media and political narratives have obscured the most important recent shift in U.S. monetary policy.
- In December, the Federal Reserve executed its most significant policy pivot in at least six years by ending quantitative tightening (QT).
- While headlines emphasized rate cuts and a “pause,” the more consequential change was a reversal in balance sheet policy.
- Over the past 3–4 years, the Fed had been withdrawing liquidity at a historic pace — shrinking its balance sheet even as it signaled easing.
- That stance has now reversed: the Fed has moved from removing approximately $50 billion per month of liquidity to injecting roughly $40 billion per month into the financial system.
- Balance sheet policy affects economic activity and asset prices more directly and with shorter lags than interest rate signaling alone.
- Real-time inflation measures suggest inflation has normalized (~1.45% YoY), giving the Fed flexibility to add liquidity without destabilizing prices.
- Economic fundamentals remain supportive, with strong GDP growth, positive real wage gains, and a labor market that continues to expand.
- The economy appears to be in the early stages of a new liquidity-driven cycle, where the effects of easing are only beginning to be felt.
- Liquidity-sensitive assets have historically responded early in such environments; recent market behavior suggests conditions may be turning.
- The evolving policy backdrop supports a constructive outlook for portfolios positioned to benefit from improving liquidity and economic acceleration.
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