- Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh has clearly stated that he will actively reduce the current balance sheet of approximately $6.7 trillion, marking a potential substantial turning point in the liquidity expansion cycle that has supported the S&P 500 Index (SPX) to rise more than sixfold since the quantitative easing in 2010.
- The shift in policy focus means that the central bank will return to a traditional regulatory framework centered on the federal funds rate, reducing the direct suppression of term premiums through asset purchases. This move is expected to exert structural upward pressure on long-term U.S. Treasury yields.
- Independent market maker Citadel Securities pointed out that the so-called "Fed Put" has not completely disappeared, but its implicit strike price has been significantly lowered, requiring market participants to bear asset volatility risks within a deeper downside space.
Marginal Policy Changes and Liquidity Reassessment
Starting from a scale of about $900 billion before the 2008 global financial crisis, the Federal Reserve's balance sheet has undergone unprecedented expansion. Warsh noted in a previous Senate confirmation hearing that the current balance sheet size disproportionately benefits groups with financial assets. This statement suggests that the pace of quantitative tightening (QT) may be maintained or even intensified in the coming quarters. As U.S. Treasuries and agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) in the Federal Reserve's System Open Market Account (SOMA) naturally mature without reinvestment, the contraction of the monetary base will directly transmit to the reserve balances of commercial banks. If the funds in the reverse repurchase agreement (RRP) tool are exhausted, the decline in reserves will accelerate, thereby raising the central rate of the overnight financing market and forcing highly leveraged financial institutions to reassess their balance sheet structures.
Yield Curve and Corporate Financing Costs
Against the backdrop of the Federal Reserve reducing purchases of long-term Treasuries, the bond market is the first to be affected. The pricing logic of long-term yields is shifting from purely rate cut expectations to the return of term premiums. Over the past decade, the central bank's continuous bond purchases have artificially suppressed long-term risk-free rates, providing an extremely low-cost debt financing environment for enterprises. If the balance sheet reduction is strictly implemented, the rise in risk-free rates will inevitably push up the benchmark rates for credit bonds. Investment-grade and high-yield corporate bond credit spreads may face widening pressure, especially for highly leveraged companies with significant debt refinancing needs, as increased interest expenses will directly erode their net profit margins. Therefore, market funds are likely to shift from long-duration, low-coupon bonds to short-duration assets to hedge duration risk.
Reconstruction of Market Pricing Mechanism
The 15-year quantitative easing has not only changed the supply and demand of funds but also profoundly reshaped market psychology. Investors have long regarded the Federal Reserve's balance sheet as a safety net for asset prices, resulting in equity risk premiums (ERP) remaining at historically low levels. Warsh's policy stance essentially breaks this one-way liquidity dependence. Although the central bank still has the ability to provide emergency liquidity during systemic crises, the intervention threshold has been significantly raised during regular market correction cycles. In the face of rising risk-free rates, overvalued assets, particularly growth tech stocks with high price-to-earnings ratios, will face significant downward pressure on the discounted value of their future cash flows. In contrast, companies with robust balance sheets and the ability to consistently generate free cash flow will see their defensive attributes further highlighted in the new valuation system.