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Economic Brief
April 2022, No. 22-15

Projecting the Evolution of the Fed's Balance Sheet
By Huberto M. Ennis and Kyler Kirk

As the Fed embarks on balance sheet policy normalization, there is natural
interest in understanding the projected evolution of the Fed's asset portfolio over
the next three to four years. Several important assumptions are needed to be
able to predict the path of the balance sheet. Based exclusively on public
information, we use alternative sets of plausible assumptions to construct and
analyze several different scenarios for the future of this critical policy-relevant
lever.
Part of the Fed's response to the pandemic crisis has involved purchasing large amounts of
Treasuries, agency debt and mortgage-backed securities (MBSs). As a result, the System
Open Market Account (SOMA) portfolio reached record levels. At the end of March, the Fed
owned $5.68 trillion in Treasury and agency securities and $2.73 trillion of MBSs.1 But how
will the Fed's balance sheet evolve as the normalization process gets underway?
The minutes for the March 2022 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
make clear that the Fed will soon start reducing the size of its balance sheet. The minutes
also provide broad guidance for how balance sheet normalization will proceed. In line with
previous Fed experience, the initial plan is not to sell securities but instead to regulate the
runoff process as the securities in the portfolio are paid off.
Given this approach, the evolution of the Fed's balance sheet going forward will generally
depend on policy decisions about certain parameters and on the way those decisions
interact with the paydown process for the Fed's asset portfolio. Among these factors are:
The date the Fed starts rolling off net assets
The composition of the portfolio when the roll-off starts
The level of Treasuries and MBS paydowns that can be anticipated going forward
The Fed's decisions to reinvest paydowns using a schedule of roll-off caps, as was done
in 2014-15

The asset composition of any reinvestments the Fed decides to make
The Fed's decisions on selling some portfolio assets if paydowns are low, and the
amount and timing of those sales
As evident from this list, there are many factors critical for predicting the evolution of the
SOMA portfolio. The March FOMC minutes narrowed the uncertainty considerably, with the
baseline program capping the monthly amount of securities allowed to roll off. When
paydowns exceed that cap, the Fed will reinvest the proceeds in either Treasuries or MBS.
The plan is to set two independent caps: one for Treasuries and one for MBS.
While the minutes helped narrow down how the normalization process would look like,
there are still several possibilities. For concreteness here, we consider a set of scenarios
which can give a general perspective on the way the Fed's balance sheet might evolve in the
next few years.
We set the projection horizon to a maximum of four years. The Fed has expressed its
intention to maintain an ample level of reserves as part of its preferred method of
monetary policy implementation.2 Using the last normalization cycle as a benchmark, we
estimate the evolution of the minimum level of bank reserves that is consistent with that
objective in the next few years. With this rough estimate in hand, and extrapolating past
behavior for the main components on the liability side of the Fed's balance sheet, we find
that the pace of normalization described in the March minutes will have reserves reaching
their minimum level consistent with "ample" sometime in 2025.
Before we introduce and discuss the different scenarios, we briefly recount how the Fed
proceeded the last time it embarked on balance sheet normalization. We will also explain
the complications associated with projecting MBS paydowns and how we estimate those.

Balance Sheet Normalization in the Past
In response to the global financial crisis, the Fed conducted several rounds of large-scale
asset purchases (LSAP). As a result, the Fed's SOMA portfolio of securities increased from
$0.5 trillion in November 2008 to over $4.2 trillion by October 2014, as seen in Figure 1.
After the third LSAP program ended in October 2014, the SOMA portfolio had 63.8 percent
in Treasuries and agency debt and 36.2 percent in MBS.3

Enlarge
Between October 2014 and October 2017, the SOMA portfolio holdings remained constant
as the Fed reinvested principal payments into the same type of security that was maturing.
The idea was to keep the Fed's balance sheet level until policy increases in interest rates
were well underway.
When the Fed started decreasing its balance sheet in October 2017, the plan was to
gradually reduce SOMA holdings by reinvesting the portion of principal payouts above
gradually increasing caps:
For Treasury coupons, the cap started at $6 billion per month and increased by $6
billion every three months until it reached $30 billion per month in October 2018.
For agency debt and MBS, the initial cap was set at $4 billion per month and increased
by $4 billion every three months until it reached $20 billion per month.
The plan was for the caps to remain until the Fed determined that it held the minimum
securities necessary to implement monetary policy efficiently and effectively using a socalled "floor system."4

Under this plan, balance sheet normalization continued until August 2019, reducing SOMA
holdings from $2.5 trillion in Treasury coupon bonds and $1.8 trillion in MBS and agency
securities to $2.1 trillion and $1.5 trillion, respectively.
In August 2019, the Fed stopped reducing its securities portfolio and started again
reinvesting all principal payments. At this point, however, the Fed sought to gradually adjust
the composition of SOMA holdings toward more Treasury securities (and less MBSs).
Principal payments on agency debt and MBS up to $20 billion per month would be
reinvested in Treasury bonds. If these payments amounted to more than $20 billion, then
the Fed would reinvest the surplus into agency MBS.
In principle, given the secular increase in currency in circulation, the level of bank reserves
would continue to gradually decrease even if the Fed keeps constant the size of its balance
sheet. Signs of stress in short-term funding markets pushed the Fed to interrupt the
process in October 2019: To keep the level of reserves at or above the level reached in
September 2019, the Fed began purchasing Treasury bills.
In response to financial market stress that occurred at the outset of the pandemic in March
2020, the Fed began a new program of large asset purchases. As a result, SOMA holdings
increased at a rapid pace until November 2021, when purchases were gradually reduced to
zero over four months. By March 2022, at the end of this process, the SOMA portfolio
reached $8.4 trillion ($5.7 trillion in Treasuries and $2.7 trillion in MBSs).

Plans for the Coming Balance Sheet Normalization
Process
As the economy recovers from the pandemic, the Fed has started discussing a new process
of balance sheet normalization. In January, the Fed released a set of principles for reducing
the balance sheet. Similar to the plan implemented in 2017, the Fed intends to reduce
security holdings over time by adjusting reinvestments of principal payments. In the longer
run, the Fed intends to hold primarily Treasury securities in the SOMA portfolio.
The minutes of the FOMC meeting in March 2022 provided further details on a possible
plan to follow to normalize the Fed's balance sheet.5 These details include:
Reducing SOMA primarily by reinvesting principal payments only to the extent they
exceed monthly caps
Establishing maximum monthly caps of $60 billion for Treasury debt and $35 billion for
agency MBS, phased in over a period of about three months
Redeeming Treasury coupon securities up to the cap first, and then redeeming
Treasury bills in months when principal payments of Treasury coupon securities are
below the cap

This plan implies a more rapid pace of balance sheet runoff than seen in 2017-19. At the
same time, the balance sheet is much larger now. As a ratio of nominal GDP, the SOMA
portfolio was equal to 21.6 percent in October 2017 and 34.6 percent in March 2022.
Importantly, the plan recognizes that after balance-sheet runoff is well underway, it may
become relevant to consider sales of MBS to enable progress towards a longer-run SOMA
portfolio composed primarily of Treasuries.

Projecting Paydowns
A critical step in projecting the evolution of the SOMA portfolio is the estimation of
securities paydowns. While this process is relatively straightforward in the case of Treasury
bonds, it is much harder for the case of MBSs. We consider a maximum horizon of four
years, for two main reasons:
It is likely that the balance sheet would be close to reaching its long-run desired path
around that time.
Predictions become more uncertain (and less informative) with longer time horizons.
Treasury Coupons

We estimate paydowns based on the maturity of securities in the portfolio, using CUSIP
information. For any amounts above the cap, we assume the Fed reinvests the proceeds in
Treasuries in proportions equal to each maturity's share in new issuances by the Treasury.6
To estimate the maturity distribution of future issuances, we assume that it remains
consistent with the average composition over the last 11 years.7
Treasury Bills

We assume bills are allowed to run off in the amount equal to the Treasury (monthly) runoff
cap exceeding Treasury coupon principal payments. In doing so, we also abstract from the
maturity distribution of SOMA Treasury bills, noting that the short maturity of Treasury bills
does not substantively alter our multiyear projections.
MBS

Paydowns in MBS are comprised of two components:
The amortization of mortgage pools backing the security
Unscheduled principal payments on those mortgage pools (due, for example, to
mortgage refinancing activity)
To project amortization paydowns, we construct a series of amortization schedules
conditional on mortgage rates and MBS term. Then, for each MBS, we apply the planned
month-over-month percent change in principal according to the schedule with the nearest
rate.

To project unscheduled principal payments, we source aggregate 2016 to present MBS SCurves showing the annual 12 month unscheduled principal payment on mortgage pools
conditional on loan age and refinancing incentive.8 From the S-Curves, we derive simple
weighted average conditional prepayment rates (CPRs) for each mortgage term (15 or 30
years) and a selection of weighted average loan age and refinancing incentive brackets. We
then apply the weighted average CPR across all MBS within its bracket. In doing so, we
abstract from additional non-rate and amortization factors such as curtailment, buyouts,
seasonality and home price appreciation.9
Caveats

While our methodology is clearly a simplification, we find that under similar interest rate
assumptions our results are in line with other recent independent projections of MBS
principal paydown.10
The SOMA portfolio has a small amount of agency debt, commercial MBS (CMBS) and other
term MBS securities. For simplicity, we treat CMBS and other term MBS securities similar to
long-term agency MBSs. Also, we allow agency debt to mature in line with its maturity date.
Finally, we count all these miscellaneous securities towards the MBS cap. Since these
security types currently compose less than 0.25 percent of SOMA securities, this
simplification does not notably affect projected paydowns.

Scenarios
With the expected path of paydowns established, we can now consider three scenarios for
how the SOMA portfolio can be expected to evolve over the next two to four years.
Scenario 1: Benchmark Scenario

Following the March FOMC minutes, we assume the Treasury reinvestment cap increases
from $20 billion to $60 billion and the MBS cap increases from $15 billion to $35 billion
from June to August. We assume that 15-year and 30-year mortgage rates stabilize at about
4.25 percent and 5 percent, respectively. Furthermore, any MBS principal payments in
excess of the cap are reinvested in Treasuries in light of the FOMC's stated goal of holding
primarily Treasuries in the longer run.
Scenario 2: No Phase-In Period for Caps

In the second case, we assume the reinvestment caps start at their long-run level of $60
billion and $35 billion in June. We again assume that 15-year and 30-year mortgage rates
stabilize at approximately 4.25 percent and 5 percent, respectively, and we note that there
are no MBS reinvestments to consider, as principal payments always remain strictly below
the cap.
Scenario 3: Sustained MBS Reductions

For this scenario, we use the same caps as Scenario 2 and assume that the amount of MBS
in the SOMA portfolio decreases at a constant rate of $30 billion per month starting in June.
One motivation for doing this is that while MBS paydowns are likely to run consistently
under the $35 billion cap, there is still significant uncertainty about the pace of MBS
paydowns that will actually be observed. We take this assumed pace of paydowns as a
valuable representation of the upper range of possibilities.11 Furthermore, given current
discussions about the possibility of MBS sales, it can be informative to consider a case
where MBS holdings continue to fall consistently, independent of paydown levels.

Projections
Given the three scenarios and our paydown projection methodology, we now discuss how
the balance sheet may evolve under Scenario 1 and how Scenarios 2 and 3 differ.
In Figure 2, we consider Treasury coupon paydowns, runoffs and reinvestments under
Scenario 1.

Enlarge
As seen in the figure, Treasury coupon principal payments run below the cap during the
first and last month of each quarter and thus will have their runoff supplemented by
maturing Treasury bills.

However, the second month of each quarter tends to rise above the cap due to an outsized
portion of Treasury issuances and, thus, maturities occurring on the second month of the
quarter. For these months, the Fed is assumed to reinvest excess Treasury coupon
paydowns in new issuances, leading to continued maturity concentrations and the cap
occasionally binding even after three years.
In Figure 3, we consider MBSs and project that MBS paydowns will consistently be well
below the $35 billion runoff cap. We also note that the path of MBS paydowns is relatively
insensitive to changes in mortgage rates, as most of the mortgages backing SOMA MBSs
were originated during a period of record-low mortgage rates, which trumps any incentive
to refinance on the part of the mortgage borrowers.

Enlarge
Based on the reinvestment and runoff paths described above and the corresponding
Treasury bill runoff amounts implied by our assumptions, we chart the progression of the
SOMA portfolio under Scenario 1 in Figure 4.

Enlarge
We note that Treasury bills persist on the portfolio for approximately three years and that
holdings of Treasury securities run off at a significantly faster rate than MBSs. Indeed,
under this scenario MBSs increase their share of SOMA from 32.5 percent in March 2022 to
34.7 percent by March 2026, delaying progress toward the FOMC longer-run goal of holding
primarily Treasury securities.
Turning to Scenarios 2 and 3, we calculate the expected paths for the SOMA portfolio and
its composition, and we summarize our results in Table 1, where we include Scenario 1 as
well for comparison.

Enlarge
Compared with Scenario 1, Scenario 2 shows that the effect of immediately implementing
the full cap is an additional reduction in Treasury security holdings of approximately $67
billion in year 2 and only $27 billion in year 4. This additional reduction in Treasury holdings
comes about as a result of lower reinvestments into Treasury coupons ($60 billion of
reinvestments due to paydowns in Treasury coupons and $7 billion of MBS paydowns
reinvested into Treasury coupons, both over the first two months). Note that the projected
level of MBS in scenarios 1 and 2 does not change at all over the horizon. This is a direct
consequence of the assumption that all MBS paydowns are invested in Treasuries. The
phasing in of the MBS cap does not matter for the evolution of MBS holdings in this case.
As we mentioned before, there is significant uncertainty over paydowns of MBS going
forward. Scenario 3 illustrates how sensitive the SOMA portfolio is with respect to the pace
of reduction in MBS holdings. In particular, considering continuous MBS paydowns of $30
billion for the entire horizon result in an extra $381 billion reduction of MBS holdings
relative to Scenario 1 by year 4. Yet, even in this scenario, the share of SOMA holdings in
MBS falls very gradually, remaining at 29.4 percent after four years.
The last two columns of Table 1 suggests that, at the proposed pace, it would take three to
four years to shrink the Fed's balance sheet to something equivalent to 20 percent of GDP,
a number that is often considered a reasonable target. On the other hand, reducing the
proportion of MBS in the total holdings of SOMA securities seems likely to take much longer
than four or five years.

Concluding Remarks
Our projections suggest that, for the set of parameters currently under consideration
regarding unwinding the balance sheet, it will take the Fed three or four years to return the
balance sheet to its long-run desired trend. In terms of composition, approaching the Fed's
ultimate target of holding primarily Treasury securities is likely to take much longer. This is
the case even when considering scenarios in which the Fed may eventually revert to selling
significant amounts of MBS.
Similarly, in terms of the long-run behavior of the balance sheet, whether to consider
gradually phasing in the roll-off caps does not seem to matter much. For that reason, it
seems likely that such a decision would be based mainly on short-term considerations, such
as communication and market functioning.
Huberto M. Ennis is an economist and Kyler J. Kirk is a research associate, both in the
Research Department at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.

1 See the Fed's System Open Market Account Holdings of Domestic Securities summary for more

details.
2 Following the January FOMC meeting, the Fed released its Principles for Reducing the Size of the

Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet. In it, the FOMC expressed its intention "to maintain securities
holdings in amounts needed to implement monetary policy efficiently and effectively in its ample
reserves regime."
3 The Board of Governors' History of the FOMC's Policy Normalization Discussions and

Communications provides an excellent summary of the recent history of Fed balance sheet
policy.
4 Under a "floor system," the Fed sets the risk-free interest rate it pays on reserves close to its

target rate and supplies sufficient reserves to reduce the market rate to near the floor created by
its risk-free rate. For a detailed discussion, see the 2012 article "Corridors and Floors in Monetary
Policy."
5 See "Plans for Reducing the Size of the Balance Sheet" on page 4 of the Minutes of the Federal

Open Market Committee March 15-16, 2022 (PDF).
6 See the New York Fed's FAQs: Treasury Rollovers for a more detailed discussion and an

example.
7 Since 2010, the maturity distribution of Treasury coupon issuance has remained approximately

invariant. We assume this trend continues and project future issuances' maturity distribution
based on the mean quarterly average new issuance share of each tenor between the first quarter
of 2010 and the first quarter of 2022.

8 A mortgage prepayment S-Curve displays the annual unscheduled percent reduction in

mortgage principal versus the mortgage refinancing incentive, defined as the difference between
the mortgage rate and the prevailing market mortgage rate.
9 See the 2017 article "Principal Payments on the Federal Reserve's Securities Holdings" for a

brief discussion of additional factors affecting MBS principal payments.
10 While simplified, our projection strategy produces MBS principal paydowns of around $25

billion when MBS rates are 3.9 percent. This aligns with the New York Fed's baseline scenario for
MBS principal paydown projections as of Feb. 16, published in Figure 7a of Lorie Logan's recent
speech "Federal Reserve Asset Purchases: The Pandemic Response and Considerations Ahead."
11 In fact, recent SOMA MBS paydowns have consistently exceeded publicly released forecasts

and historical trends, coming in at $54.6 billion, $50.9 billion, $42.8 billion and $38 billion from
December 2021 to March 2022. These are above model predictions between $20 billion and $35
billion. See the New York Fed's Agency MBS Historical Operational Results and Planned Purchase
Amounts for the new purchase versus reinvestment breakdown.

To cite this Economic Brief, please use the following format: Ennis, Huberto M.; and Kirk, Kyler J.
(April 2022) "Projecting the Evolution of the Fed's Balance Sheet" Federal Reserve Bank of
Richmond Economic Brief, No. 22-15.

This article may be photocopied or reprinted in its entirety. Please credit the authors,
source, and the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond and include the italicized statement
below.
Views expressed in this article are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Richmond or the Federal Reserve System.

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