The Fed’s not making a profit - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 中央银行

The Fed’s not making a profit

In these unusual times, Congress and the White House should be clear what they plan to do about a loss
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":5.43,"text":"The writer is an FT contributing editor"}],[{"start":8.51,"text":"This month the Federal Reserve decided it would cut its own workforce by a tenth over the next several years. The move has been reported as a way to find savings at the Fed before the so-called Department of Government Efficiency knocks on the door. That may be right, but the Fed has another problem it doesn’t like to talk about: it’s operating at a loss. On purpose."}],[{"start":36.3,"text":"When a commercial bank lends you money, it’s adding both an asset and a liability to its own balance sheet. The asset is the loan itself, which you will repay over time. The liability is brand-new deposits, which it marks up from scratch in your account. Those deposits are brand-new money."}],[{"start":57.75,"text":"The Federal Reserve is a special bank, but it’s still a bank. When it adds assets to its own balance sheet like treasuries or mortgage-backed securities, it matches those with liabilities — either brand-new physical dollar notes or brand-new deposits. We call deposits at the Fed reserves, but they’re just deposits. There is no magic to this, no special money creation. It’s just banking."}],[{"start":86.64,"text":"The point of a commercial bank is to operate at a profit, keeping returns on assets higher than the costs of liabilities. But macroeconomists have come to believe that this just isn’t true of the Fed. It issues dollars and can always issue more, therefore losses don’t matter. But this is an assumption, not a law of physics. What it misses is the political importance of seigniorage — the profit to the sovereign nation’s coffers for manufacturing money."}],[{"start":118.93,"text":"Until 2023, the Fed consistently made a profit. The returns on its assets were higher than the costs of its liabilities. It returned some of this profit to the government, demonstrating its strength both as a bank and as political institution. It is easier to remain independent of the White House when you’re the one paying for the privilege."}],[{"start":142.36,"text":"The Fed’s liabilities used to cost it nothing. First, even though physical dollar notes are a liability for the Fed, they don’t pay interest. Second, commercial banks have always had to hold some of their assets as deposits at the Fed — reserves. The Fed didn’t pay interest on these either, until a 2006 law, implemented during the beginning of the Global Financial Crisis in 2008. "}],[{"start":170.44,"text":"Traditionally, bankers have felt about holding reserves the way children feel about taking a bath. They’re against it, but that’s not really the point, because it’s not their decision. Reserves aren’t supposed to be profitable — they’re supposed to be safe. Once the Fed started paying interest on reserves, however, this necessity didn’t seem that painful. Banks got used to holding a safe asset with a small but guaranteed return. They started holding way more reserves than they needed to."}],[{"start":203.82,"text":"Now the Fed is stuck in an operating system it calls the ample-reserves regime, one where bankers love bath time. Under this regime, the Fed carries out interest-rate policy by moving the interest it pays on reserves up and down. It decides, essentially, how much to lose on its liabilities. This isn’t quantitative easing in an emergency, it’s just normal operations. In 2023, the Fed reported a loss of $114bn; in 2024, $78bn."}],[{"start":241.41,"text":"This is a departure without a discussion. The reason we assume the Fed cannot possibly fail is that Congress will always protect its central bank with the promise of new capital in an emergency. Now, in perfectly normal years, the Fed can incur losses when it raises its rates."}],[{"start":261,"text":"The Fed books these losses as what it calls deferred assets, a note of how much profit it will have to earn back before it can start paying its contribution to the Department of the Treasury again. This is a privilege unique to the Fed, a tacit understanding that there will be lean and fat years, which will balance each other out as rates fall again in the future."}],[{"start":287.64,"text":"The profit the Fed makes on issuing dollar cash may be going away as well. Cash continues to decline as a share of total payments. The White House and Republicans in Congress have made clear that the Fed is not to replace dollar cash on its own balance sheet with any other kind of liability, such as a digital currency."}],[{"start":310.58,"text":"At the same time, a bill in the Senate would instead bring stablecoins providers into a regulatory regime where they have to hold assets against every coin in either Treasuries, reserves at the Fed, insured bank deposits, or treasury repurchase agreements. This means over the long term, the Fed’s profits on cash are moving to the private sector."}],[{"start":336.08,"text":"None of this mattered in normal times, when the Fed was supported by a consensus with Congress and the White House on the norms of monetary policy. But these are not normal times. The Federal Reserve is a bank. And we should be clear about exactly whose bank it is, whether Congress and the White House expect a profit, and what they plan to do about a loss."}],[{"start":366.4,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftmailbox.cn/album/a_1748302346_8909.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

企业忽视55岁以上消费者是个战略性错误

据一项预测,到2050年,美国的总消费支出中,每1美元将有61美分由50岁以上人群贡献。

人工智能热潮并非泡沫

哈丁:AI估值或许耀眼,泡沫也可能随之而来——但眼下虽有亢奋,却谈不上狂热或非理性。

泡沫担忧升温,AI初创企业囤积创纪录的1500亿美元“弹药”

巨额融资轮为这些企业打造“堡垒式资产负债表”,投资者建议头部公司为更艰难的市场做好准备。

伦敦市长:民粹主义者攻击伦敦是因为它“进步且成功”

伦敦市长萨迪克•汗表示,右翼民粹主义者描绘的伦敦形象与现实完全不符。

印度航空业的动荡一年

印度靛蓝航空的大规模出行混乱与印度航空公司的致命空难,引发了打破这个全球第三大航空运输市场双头垄断的呼声。

泽连斯基正准备会见特朗普,俄罗斯称乌克兰在规避谈判

外交部长谢尔盖•拉夫罗夫称,欧洲是和平的主要障碍。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×