沃什出席听证会之际,美联储缩表框架渐趋清晰


2026-04-21T10:07:26.337Z / 路透社

作者:迈克尔·S·德贝里
2026年4月21日 美国东部时间上午10:07 更新于1小时前

节点运行失败

凯文·沃什,胡佛研究所经济学研究员、斯坦福大学商学院讲师,2017年5月8日在美国纽约出席Sohn投资会议时发言。路透社/布伦丹·麦克德莫特/档案照片

  • 内容摘要
  • 缩表理由基于监管改革
  • 学界及部分美联储官员认可缩表路径
  • 美联储资产规模缩减或为降息打开通道

4月21日(路透社)——凯文·沃什希望美联储大幅削减其庞大的债券持仓,但如果他获提名出任美国央行下一任行长,目前尚未明确阐述具体实施计划,而这一问题很可能会在周二参议院银行委员会举行的提名听证会上被提及。

与此同时,在沃什尚未公布具体方案的情况下,美联储内外正共同努力,为这一目标提供理论支撑。

《本周观点》新闻简报将带来路透全球金融评论团队的洞见与思路。点击此处订阅

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学界研究基本达成共识:如果美联储希望缩小其在金融市场中的规模,关键在于降低金融机构持有大量现金的必要性。学界人士和部分美联储官员表示,允许银行减少准备金持有量的监管改革是缩表的核心路径,并补充称,美联储调整利率调控工具的使用方式也将有所助益。

从理论上讲,部分调整可让美联储采取比原本更为宽松的货币政策立场,但目前尚不清楚这一设想将如何落地。

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但放宽要求、促使金融机构减少现金囤积,也可能给整个金融体系带来其他风险。

莱特森ICAP的分析师在上周末给客户的报告中表示:“我们对过去两个月里(联邦公开市场委员会)关于资产负债表规模的辩论进展感到鼓舞”,并且“各方普遍认为,存在通过监管举措降低基础准备金需求的空间”。

监管审查

美联储理事斯蒂芬·米兰在上月发布的一篇研究论文中指出,通过放松流动性监管、调整银行压力测试规则以及推动现有美联储流动性工具的更多使用,美联储规模达6.68万亿美元的资产负债表最多可缩减2万亿美元。

达拉斯联储主席洛丽·洛根曾是纽约联储央行货币政策操作机制的核心设计者,她在本月初也认同,围绕流动性的规则改革等举措,能够降低准备金规模,为缩表铺平道路。

准备金作为市场流动性的指标,在美联储资产负债表相关辩论中占据核心地位,因为美联储通过管理准备金水平来实现利率目标。如果准备金紧张,货币市场利率可能开始上升,威胁到美联储对利率目标的管控。如果系统内现金过多,美联储则会减少债券持仓以回笼资金。

美联储在上一轮缩表周期结束后,目前正处于重建市场流动性的阶段,同时始终牢牢控制着联邦基金目标利率区间,这是其官员高度关注的关键问题。

2007年至2009年全球金融危机期间,美联储开始定期大规模购买美国国债和抵押贷款支持证券,以稳定金融市场并强化经济刺激措施。此后的资产负债表扩张阶段,伴随了被动缩表以及一套复杂的利率管理工具体系的发展。

几乎没有专家认为,美联储能够回到沃什最初以理事身份加入美联储时的那种所谓“稀缺准备金”体系。

有了实质进展

如果沃什获得参议院确认,近期的这些研究成果将有助于他找到缩表并降息的路径。

米兰在其论文中提出,缩表本身就是一种经济紧缩手段,因此美联储可以通过降息来形成对冲。

纽约联储主席约翰·威廉姆斯上月晚些时候对记者表示,鉴于美联储扩表似乎能够降低长期利率、提振经济,“如果缩表,预计将减少经济总需求,推高长期利率,因此作为应对,短期利率可能会小幅下调”。

“我认为这合乎逻辑,”但他同时表示,目前尚不清楚这一效应在现实中会有多大的可衡量空间。

不过,即便由沃什主导,任何改革都不太可能快速推进。

曾在美联储担任高级职员、现为杜克大学研究教授的艾伦·米德表示:“我认为其中一些举措确实具备可行性,但实施起来需要时间。”她称,近期的提议能够减轻美联储为缓解市场压力而购买债券的必要性。

此外,近期的研究成果还有助于维持当前的充足准备金体系,“但在这个体系中,银行日常的准备金需求会降低,因为它们可以随时从央行获取流动性”,她补充道。

迈克尔·S·德贝里 报道;保罗·西mao 编辑

我们的报道准则:汤森路透信托原则。

As Warsh faces hearing, a framework for smaller Fed balance sheet emerges

2026-04-21T10:07:26.337Z / Reuters

By Michael S. Derby

April 21, 2026 10:07 AM UTC Updated 1 hour ago

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Kevin Warsh, Fellow in Economics at the Hoover Institution and lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, speaks during the Sohn Investment Conference in New York City, U.S., May 8, 2017. REUTERS/Brendan Mcdermid/File Photo

  • Summary
  • Case for smaller Fed balance sheet rests on regulatory changes
  • Academics, some Fed officials see path for reducing balance sheet
  • Lower Fed holdings could open door to lower interest rates

April 21 (Reuters) – Kevin Warsh would like to see the Federal Reserve slash its vast bond holdings, but has yet to flesh out just how he would do that if confirmed to be the next ​head of the U.S. central bank, a matter likely to come up in his confirmation hearing on Tuesday before the Senate Banking Committee.

Meanwhile, in the absence of specifics from ‌Warsh, an effort is underway both in and outside the Fed to provide some intellectual heft for that goal.

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The academic work largely agrees that if the central bank wants a smaller footprint in financial markets, the key is reducing financial institutions’ need to hold large amounts of cash. Academics and some Fed officials say regulatory changes allowing banks to hold less in the form of reserves are the primary path toward getting the balance sheet down, adding that changes ​in how the Fed uses its rate-control toolkit could also help.

Some modifications could in theory allow the Fed to pursue an easier stance of monetary policy than would ​otherwise be the case, although it remains unclear how that would play out.

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But easing rules inducing financial institutions to hoard cash also could create ⁠other risks for the broader financial system.

“We have been encouraged by the evolution of the (Federal Open Market Committee) debate on the size of the balance sheet over the past couple of months” ​and there is “widespread agreement that there are regulatory opportunities to reduce that basic level of reserve demand,” analysts at Wrightson ICAP said in a note to clients last weekend.

REGULATION REVIEW

Fed Governor Stephen Miran ​in a research paper last month argued that the central bank’s $6.68 trillion in assets could be cut by as much as $2 trillion by loosening liquidity regulations, making adjustments to bank stress testing and working to bolster usage of existing Fed liquidity tools.

Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, who was a key architect of the central bank’s monetary policy mechanics at the New York Fed, agreed early this month that rule changes around liquidity, among other options, could lower reserves and ​pave the way to a smaller Fed balance sheet.

Reserves, a proxy for market liquidity, loom large in the debate over the Fed’s balance sheet, as the central bank manages their levels to ​achieve its interest rate target. If reserves get tight, money market rates can start to rise and threaten the central bank’s control over that target. If there’s too much cash in the system, the Fed reduces ‌its bond holdings ⁠to siphon funds out of the system.

The Fed is currently rebuilding market liquidity levels after finishing the last chapter of its balance-sheet drawdown, and it has maintained firm control over the federal funds target rate range, a critical concern for its officials.

Starting during the 2007-2009 global financial crisis, the Fed has periodically used large-scale purchases of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities to stabilize financial markets and bolster its economic stimulus work. Those balance sheet expansions have been followed by passive drawdowns joined with the evolution of a complex toolkit to manage interest rates.

Few experts believe the Fed can return to ​the system of so-called “scarce” reserves used prior to ​the financial crisis when Warsh initially joined the ⁠Fed as a governor.

SOME MEAT ON THE BONE

The recent work could help Warsh, should he be confirmed by the Senate, find a path toward lower Fed holdings and interest rates.

Miran argued in his paper that a smaller Fed balance sheet is a form of restraint on the economy, so ​the central bank could cut interest rates as a counterbalance.

Noting that the central bank’s balance-sheet expansion appears to lower long-term rates and bolster the economy, New York ​Fed President John Williams told ⁠reporters late last month that “if you’re going to shrink the balance sheet, that will presumably reduce aggregate demand in the economy, get higher long-term interest rates, and therefore you would have a little bit lower short-term interest rate” in reaction.

“I think that’s logical,” but it’s also unclear how much of this would be measurable in real-world terms, Williams said.

Still, there’s no sense any changes will happen quickly even under ⁠Warsh’s leadership.

“My bet ​is some of these things are quite live, but will take time to implement,” said Ellen Meade, a former ​high-ranking Fed staff member who is now a research professor at Duke University. She says the recent proposals could mitigate the need for the Fed to buy bonds to ease market stress.

What’s more, the recent work could help preserve the current ample reserves ​regime, “but within a system where banks have lower demand day to day because they can get liquidity from the central bank on demand,” she said.

Reporting by Michael S. Derby; Editing by Paul Simao

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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