Fed policy in 2021: Three things to watch

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It has been a long year for the Federal Reserve.

Since the first cases of COVID-19 in the United States, the central bank has slashed interest rates to zero, restarted its quantitative easing program, and opened up a slew of emergency loan facilities to backstop markets ranging from corporate debt to municipal bonds.

The beginning of the new year will be a critical inflection point for the U.S. economy. With case counts surging across the country, the Fed will attempt to bridge the next few months until widespread vaccination and herd immunity are achieved.

With interest rates near-zero and likely to stay there through the end of 2023, that means a need for other, unconventional monetary policy tools.

“There is more that we can do, certainly,” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said December 16, adding that the second half of 2021 should see the economy “performing strongly.”

So what should markets be watching for from the Federal Reserve next year?

Emergency loan facilities

As COVID-19 began ripping through the country in March, the Fed moved to backstop several financial markets and stand up new programs offering credit to business borrowers.

Several of the programs will expire on December 31, at the order of U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. But if economic conditions worsen next year, the Fed will face a difficult question: whether or not to re-open the facilities.

Three programs in particular will pose legal and political challenges to the Fed: the Municipal Liquidity Facility (loans to state and local governments), the Main Street Lending Program (loans to small- and medium-sized businesses), and the Corporate Credit Facilities (liquidity for corporate debt markets).

Language buried in the over 5,000-page government spending bill, which includes COVID-19 relief, would bar the Fed from either resurrecting those three programs or anything the “same as” those programs.

But current and former Fed officials have been vocal about their desire to keep those emergency programs available into 2021.

The Fed announced on December 29 that the Main Street Lending Program will remain open until January 8, instead of closing at the end of the year so the central bank would have time to process and fund loans submitted on or before December 14. The Fed said Mnuchin approved the extension.

A Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, pending Senate confirmation, could work with the Fed on other programs in the future. But the new statutory limitations may entangle the Fed in political backlash if it attempts to toe the line on re-opening something close to the three facilities in question.