Fed Chair Powell Hints at End of 3-Year QT Cycle
U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled that the Fed’s three-year effort to shrink its massive U.S. Treasury holdings may soon be coming to an end.
These holdings were originally purchased in 2020 to stimulate the economy during the pandemic. The statement clearly refers to the Fed’s quantitative tightening (QT) policy — a gradual process that began in mid-2022, where the Fed allowed its assets to mature without reinvesting the proceeds. This has steadily drained reserves from the banking system.
As part of winding down the pandemic-era stimulus, the Fed has been reducing its $6.6 trillion balance sheet.
📈 1. More liquidity in the system
When the Fed stops reducing its balance sheet, it effectively stops draining cash from the financial system. More liquidity usually supports higher asset prices, including stocks.
💵 2. Lower pressure on interest rates
QT tends to push interest rates higher. Ending QT could stabilize or even lower long-term yields, which helps growth and tech stocks that are sensitive to borrowing costs.
⚖️ 3. Market confidence boost
Investors may see this as a sign that the Fed feels comfortable with inflation and economic conditions — boosting confidence that the tightening cycle is over.
⚠️ But caution:
If the Fed ends QT because it’s worried about slowing growth or liquidity stress in the banking system, markets could interpret it as a warning sign instead.
In short —
👉 If it’s a sign of confidence, stocks up.
👉 If it’s a sign of worry, stocks may wobble.
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- kooko·2025-10-15TOPGreat insights! This could change the game! [Wow]1Report
- Astrid Stephen·2025-10-16More liquidity = stocks up.I’m loading growth plays now!1Report
