Lead paragraph
The Federal Reserve can reduce its balance sheet meaningfully from current levels, but the process will be protracted and multi-step, Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran said on Mar 26, 2026 at the Economic Club of Miami (Bloomberg, Mar 26, 2026). Miran emphasized that meaningful shrinkage is feasible but warned the operational, market and communication challenges mean the process is likely to take years rather than quarters. Market participants have been interpreting that caution as a signal that policy normalization through balance-sheet runoff will be gradual even if the policy rate remains restrictive; the federal funds target stood at 5.25% as of the FOMC statement on Mar 19, 2026 (FOMC, Mar 19, 2026). Investors are recalibrating duration exposures and liquidity assumptions as a result; the Fed’s balance sheet on the H.4.1 release for the week ending Mar 25, 2026 showed total assets at $8.8 trillion (Federal Reserve H.4.1, Mar 25, 2026). This commentary explores the operational pathway Miran described, quantifies the likely market impacts, and evaluates strategic implications for institutional portfolios without making investment recommendations.
Context
The post-pandemic expansion of the Fed’s balance sheet was large and persistent: total assets rose from roughly $4.2 trillion in early 2020 to a peak exceeding $9.1 trillion in late 2022 during successive asset purchase programs (Federal Reserve H.4.1, Nov 2022). Since that peak, the balance sheet has contracted modestly, standing at $8.8 trillion on Mar 25, 2026 (Federal Reserve H.4.1), implying a reduction of roughly $300 billion–$400 billion from peak levels depending on the date used for comparison. Miran’s comment that a meaningful reduction is possible but will take years reflects both the sheer scale of securities holdings—Treasuries and agency MBS together accounted for approximately $6.8 trillion of holdings in the latest weekly release—and the operational constraints around runoff and market functioning.
Miran framed reduction as a multi-step process that must balance the pace of runoff with market depth, dealer capacity, and the need to avoid destabilizing reserve scarcity. The Fed’s historical experience with quantitative tightening (QT) from 2017–2019, when the program peaked at a cap-equivalent runoff of about $47.5 billion per month in Treasury and agency debt (Federal Reserve communications, 2018–2019), demonstrates that even modest monthly net reductions accumulate slowly. Those prior QT episodes coincided with periods of relative market stability; replicating such a path when the balance sheet is much larger and global liquidity dynamics are different would require careful calibration.
The wider macro backdrop complicates the calculus. Core inflation readings and labor-market tightness in 2025–26 have kept policy rates elevated; the effective federal funds rate of 5.25% (FOMC, Mar 19, 2026) is materially above the pre-pandemic neutral estimates, constraining the Fed’s room to use rate cuts as a primary deflationary mechanism. Consequently, balance-sheet policy has become a second-order lever that the Fed is increasingly signaling it will use incrementally. Miran’s emphasis on years, not quarters, for balance-sheet normalization is therefore consistent with a stance of preserving optionality while letting rates remain the primary immediate tool for demand management.
Data Deep Dive
The most recent Federal Reserve H.4.1 release (Mar 25, 2026) lists total assets at $8.8 trillion, with Treasury securities at approximately $4.6 trillion and agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) near $2.2 trillion (Federal Reserve H.4.1, Mar 25, 2026). Compared with the November 2022 peak of $9.1–9.2 trillion, total assets are down about $300–400 billion, a decline of roughly 3.3–4.4% from peak—modest in both absolute and percentage terms given the multi-trillion-dollar starting point. Year-over-year, the balance sheet has contracted by an estimated 1.6% from the Mar 2025 H.4.1 figure (Federal Reserve H.4.1, Mar 2025), indicating a slow tempo of reduction relative to prior QT episodes.
Market pricing provides an independent gauge of how investors expect the Fed’s balance-sheet path to evolve. The 10-year Treasury yield traded around 3.95% on Mar 26, 2026 (U.S. Treasury daily yield curve, Mar 26, 2026), versus an average near 1.6% in 2021—an important comparison that shows how much of the realignment of fixed-income yields has already occurred via rate moves and market repricing. If the Fed were to accelerate runoff to match the 2018–2019 pace ($40–50 billion/month), the marginal effect on term premia would likely be meaningfully larger now than it was then because reserves and dealer balance-sheet capacity are more constrained post-pandemic and global central bank liquidity has tightened (IMF Global Liquidity indicators, 2026).
Operationally, Miran highlighted sequencing considerations: reduce reinvestments only after ensuring primary dealers and Treasury market plumbing can absorb supply without dislocation; use caps and gradually lift them rather than a single step; and maintain clear communication to avoid unpriced jumps in term premiums. That sequencing mirrors language used in Fed minutes from prior normalization cycles (FOMC minutes, 2018–2019), but Miran added that the size of the current holdings implies the Fed will face asymmetric risks—too-fast runoff risks yield spikes, too-slow runoff risks a permanent increase in the Fed’s footprint and crowding of private markets.
Sector Implications
Interest-rate-sensitive sectors will continue to face elevated volatility as the Fed transitions toward a smaller footprint. For banks, a gradual reduction in excess reserves—currently well in excess of pre-2020 levels—will compress liquidity buffers and could raise funding costs if market participants expect a sustained decline in reserve abundance (Federal Reserve balance sheet composition, 2026). Asset managers that had relied on elevated market liquidity during periods of large Fed holdings may find bid–ask spreads widening and term liquidity diminishing in less-liquid corners of fixed income, particularly agency MBS and long-dated corporates. Insurance companies and pension funds with duration-heavy liabilities will compare the relative attractiveness of extending duration versus hedging costlier term premia as the Fed reduces reinvestments.
Compared with peers, the Fed’s balance-sheet normalization path will diverge from other major central banks: the European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of Japan (BoJ) both hold sizeable portfolios but have different policy regimes and transmission mechanics. For instance, the ECB’s asset holdings relative to GDP have been lower than the Fed’s on a per-capita basis in several recent assessments (ECB statistical releases, 2025–26), while the BoJ continued partial yield-curve control into 2025. Those differences imply that global spillovers from U.S. balance-sheet policy may be asymmetric—U.S. QT could raise dollar funding costs and prompt portfolio rebalancing that feeds into EM asset prices and cross-border bank funding.
The credit-spread channel is also relevant: a meaningful reduction in Fed presence in the Treasury market could lift term premiums and push down the relative attractiveness of spread products, compressing flows into riskier credit during episodes of tightening. Historical comparisons to 2018–2019 show that episodes of rising term premium coincided with spread widening in lower-rated corporates, which in turn impacted CLO issuance and leveraged-lending markets (SIFMA, 2019). Institutional investors should therefore reassess liquidity assumptions and stress scenarios used for portfolio construction.
Risk Assessment
Operational risk is non-trivial. If the Fed attempts to accelerate runoff without adequate dealer intermediation capacity, Treasury market functioning could deteriorate—observed at times in late 2018 when repo stresses forced recalibration (NY Fed repo events, Sep 2019). Miran’s emphasis on steps and time recognizes that repo market health and primary dealer balance sheets are chief constraints; a misstep could prompt abrupt term-premium increases and forced de-risking by leveraged participants. That risk is exacerbated by cross-border funding dynamics, where dollar scarcity can magnify the effects of U.S.-centric liquidity adjustments.
Political and communication risks compound the technical problems. The Fed’s credibility in managing an orderly unfolding of QT depends on clear guidance and predictable mechanics; any perceived ambiguity can cause market participants to pre-emptively re-price risk, amplifying volatility. Moreover, fiscal policy developments—large Treasury issuance tied to fiscal deficits—could interact with Fed runoff, meaning the path of net Treasury supply to private markets may rise more rapidly than the Fed’s stated schedule, increasing term-premium pressure.
Macro feedback loops present another layer of risk. A faster-than-expected term-premium increase could raise mortgage and corporate borrowing costs, slowing activity and perversely pushing the Fed toward more accommodative rate paths to arrest the downturn—an outcome Miran implicitly seeks to avoid by advocating careful sequencing. Conversely, a too-slow runoff may keep financial conditions easier for longer, complicating inflation control. Institutional risk teams should therefore model both operational shock scenarios and slower-pace normalization outcomes when stress-testing portfolios.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views Miran’s public calibration as an intentional signal: the Fed is prioritizing predictable, stepwise balance-sheet normalization to avoid repeating the market stress episodes of the past. This implies that market participants who price an abrupt, front-loaded QT that materially lifts term premia in the immediate term are underestimating the Fed’s tolerance for protracted normalization. From an informational standpoint, Miran’s comments reduce tail risk of an abrupt runoff but raise the odds of a multi-year recalibration of liquidity and term structure.
Contrarian implication: a slower multi-year runoff increases the chance that the Fed’s balance-sheet footprint becomes structurally smaller only as a result of portfolio rolloff and natural maturity rather than aggressive, mechanical runoff. That scenario would mean a longer transition in which elevated policy rates, not QT, are the primary mechanism of policy normalization. Institutional investors should therefore broaden their scenario sets to include a "long QT-lite" where the balance sheet drifts down by calendar amortization and reinvestment tapering rather than large monthly caps. For further reading on portfolio construction adjustments under prolonged normalization, see [Fazen Capital insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Another non-obvious risk is the interaction between QT and fiscal supply dynamics. If fiscal issuance steps up materially over the next 12–24 months, the Fed’s ability to shrink its nominal holdings in absolute terms will be constrained even if holdings fall as a share of GDP. Fazen’s internal modeling suggests that under a scenario of $1.2 trillion gross Treasury issuance over a 12-month window, attempting to match 2018–19 runoff speeds would likely create pressure points in dealer inventories and term premium formation. Clients seeking granular analysis can consult our sector and liquidity reports at [Fazen Capital research](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How long could "years" be in practice? A: Miran’s use of "years" implies a multi-year window likely in the range of 2–5 years, reflecting operational constraints and market-clearing dynamics. Historical QT from 2017–2019 showed that a few tens of billions per month only marginally reduced the balance sheet over two years; given the larger starting point in 2026, a 2–5 year horizon is a realistic baseline for planning.
Q: Could balance-sheet reduction trigger a recession? A: Balance-sheet reduction is a secondary monetary tool; the primary driver of aggregate demand remains the policy rate. A too-rapid QT could elevate term premia and borrowing costs, tightening financial conditions and contributing to a sharper slowdown—this is a plausible tail risk but not a predetermined outcome. Scenario analysis should consider both the pace of runoff and concurrent fiscal and macro conditions.
Bottom Line
Governor Miran’s statement that reducing the Fed’s balance sheet "could take years" is a clear signal that normalization will be gradual, sequenced and data-dependent; market participants should plan for a protracted adjustment in liquidity and term premia. Institutional investors need to stress-test portfolios across a range of QT speeds and fiscal-supply scenarios while recognizing that rate policy remains the Fed’s primary near-term lever.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
