Several Federal Reserve officials wanted to start reducing the trillions of dollars of assets held by the central bank “within a couple of months” to accelerate the return to a more normal monetary policy after years of battling the Great Recession, according to an account released Wednesday of their most recent meeting.

But other members of the policymaking Federal Open Market Committee advocated for waiting until later this year to start slowly scaling back the Fed’s $4.5-trillion balance sheet to allow more time to assess the state of the economy, the minutes of the June 13-14 meeting said.

After that meeting, the Fed announced it planned to start reducing the balance sheet sometime this year but provided no timetable.

The amount of assets on the Fed’s balance sheet more than quadrupled to $4.5 trillion since 2008 as the central bank bought Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities to try to stimulate the economy.


Economists said the asset purchases helped lower mortgage rates and spur investment activity.

Even though the Fed stopped buying bonds in 2014, the amount of assets has remained roughly the same because the money from maturing ones has been reinvested in new ones.

Allowing some of the proceeds from those maturing bonds to be cashed in presents risks because the move could increase borrowing costs.

Reducing the size of the balance sheet — along with ongoing increases in a key short-term interest rate — is seen as a key step in the long recovery from the 2007-09 recession.


The minutes from the June meeting offered no new indications of when the next rate hike would come. Fed policymakers voted 8-1 in June to nudge up the benchmark federal funds rate. The increase of 0.25 percentage point raised the rate to between 1% and 1.25%.

It was the third such increase in six months.

In their forecasts, Fed officials have signaled another small rate increase is coming this year, and three more are expected in 2018 until the rate reaches about 2.1%. A few committee members who supported the June increase “indicated that they were less comfortable” with the forecasts for additional hikes through the end of next year because of concerns that inflation would remain below the Fed’s 2% annual target, the minutes said.

Federal Reserve Board Chairman Janet Yellen speaks during a briefing on March 15, 2017 in Washington, DC. / AFP PHOTO / Brendan SmialowskiBRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images ** OUTS - ELSENT, FPG, CM - OUTS * NM, PH, VA if sourced by CT, LA or MoD ** (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI / AFP/Getty Images)


Several policymakers supported slowing the pace of interest rate increases and allowing the already low unemployment rate to decline further in order to increase inflation and wage growth.

The Fed’s next meeting is July 25-26. The Fed won’t meet after that until late September. Fed Chairwoman Janet L. Yellen will hold her quarterly news conference after the July meeting, which would allow her to explain the start of the balance sheet reduction plan.

The plan, approved in June, involves the Fed slowly reducing its holdings by gradually allowing an increasing amount of proceeds from maturing securities to be run off the books each month.

As the bonds mature, the government pays the face value to the Fed. The Fed would keep some of the proceeds instead of reinvesting them.


The amount of proceeds would start at $10 billion a month and increase until it reached $50 billion a month. Any profit the Fed has at the end of the year must be sent to the U.S. Treasury.

Over time, the Fed’s assets would be reduced “to a level appreciably below that seen in recent years” but larger than before the crisis, officials said.

After the June meeting, Yellen said the plan would lead to “a gradual and largely predictable decline” in the assets. The reductions would begin this year “provided that the economy evolves broadly” as Fed officials are forecasting, she said.

jim.puzzanghera@latimes.com


Twitter: @JimPuzzanghera

UPDATES:

11:40 a.m.: This article was updated with additional detail about how the Fed plans to reduce its assets.

This article was originally published at 11 a.m.