Quantitative Easing
Quantitative Easing
An unconventional monetary policy tool where the Federal Reserve purchases large quantities of longer-term securities (Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities) to lower long-term interest rates and inject liquidity when short-term rates are already near zero. QE expands the Fed's balance sheet and aims to stimulate economic activity by reducing borrowing costs and encouraging lending and investment.
During the 2008 financial crisis, the Fed launched QE1, purchasing $1.75 trillion in Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities to stabilize financial markets and lower long-term interest rates after cutting the federal funds rate to near zero. Similarly, in March 2020, the Fed implemented unlimited QE to support the economy during the COVID-19 pandemic.
QE is often confused with normal open market operations. Regular OMO targets short-term rates through small daily purchases of short-term Treasury bills, while QE involves massive purchases of long-term securities to lower long-term rates when conventional policy (lowering short-term rates) is exhausted at the zero lower bound.
How This Is Tested
- Distinguishing between conventional monetary policy (open market operations targeting short-term rates) and unconventional policy (QE targeting long-term rates)
- Understanding when QE is used: when short-term rates are already at or near zero and conventional policy is ineffective
- Recognizing the impact of QE on bond prices (increases) and yields (decreases) for longer-term securities
- Identifying the intended effects of QE: lower borrowing costs, increased lending, asset price support, economic stimulus
- Understanding the risks and side effects of QE: potential inflation, asset bubbles, Fed balance sheet expansion
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| QE1 (2008-2010) | $1.75 trillion in asset purchases | First QE program during financial crisis, focused on MBS and Treasury securities |
| QE2 (2010-2011) | $600 billion in Treasury purchases | Second round targeting long-term Treasury bonds |
| QE3 (2012-2014) | $85 billion per month (open-ended) | Third round with flexible monthly purchase amounts until economic targets met |
| COVID-19 QE (2020-2022) | Initially unlimited, peaked at $120 billion/month | $80B Treasuries + $40B MBS monthly at peak |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Thomas, an investment adviser, is meeting with his client David during an economic crisis. The Federal Reserve has already lowered the federal funds rate to 0.25% and announces a new $700 billion quantitative easing program purchasing long-term Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities. David asks how this might affect his 401(k) portfolio, which is heavily allocated to long-term government bonds. Which statement most accurately describes the likely impact?
B is correct. When the Fed implements QE by purchasing large quantities of long-term bonds, it increases demand for these securities in the market. This increased demand drives bond prices up and yields down (inverse relationship). David's long-term government bond holdings would likely experience price appreciation in the short term as the Fed's purchases support the market.
A is incorrect because it misunderstands the supply-demand dynamic. The Fed is a major buyer adding demand, not supply. When a large buyer (the Fed) enters the market purchasing bonds, it drives prices up, not down. C is incorrect because QE specifically targets long-term securities, not short-term ones. Unlike conventional open market operations (which target short-term rates), QE is designed to lower long-term interest rates when short-term rates are already at zero. D is incorrect about the direction of yield changes. QE pushes yields lower, not higher. While QE can raise long-term inflation concerns, the immediate market impact is lower yields as the Fed purchases drive up bond prices.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of how unconventional Fed policies like QE affect client portfolios differently than conventional rate cuts. Investment advisers must explain that QE creates tailwinds for longer-term bonds through direct Fed purchases, unlike regular OMO which primarily affects short-term rates. This knowledge is critical for managing fixed-income allocations during crisis periods.
What is the primary distinguishing characteristic of quantitative easing (QE) compared to conventional open market operations?
B is correct. QE is an unconventional monetary policy tool used when conventional policy (lowering short-term rates through regular OMO) has been exhausted because rates are already at or near zero. QE involves massive purchases of longer-term securities (10-year, 20-year, 30-year Treasury bonds and MBS) to directly lower long-term interest rates and inject liquidity into the financial system. The scale is much larger than daily OMO operations.
A is incorrect because both QE and conventional OMO involve purchasing securities when the Fed wants to ease policy. The difference is in the type, scale, and maturity of securities purchased. C is incorrect because both QE and OMO are conducted by the Federal Reserve (specifically the FOMC and the New York Fed trading desk), not the Treasury. The Treasury issues debt; the Fed manages monetary policy. D is incorrect about the securities purchased. QE primarily focuses on Treasury securities and agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS), not corporate bonds. Some crisis programs have included corporate bond ETFs, but the core QE purchases are Treasuries and MBS.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests the distinction between conventional and unconventional monetary policy tools. Understanding that QE is a crisis tool targeting long-term rates (when short-term rates are already zero) helps advisers interpret Fed policy announcements and anticipate their impact on different asset classes across the yield curve.
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Access Free BetaThe Federal Reserve announces a quantitative easing program purchasing $80 billion per month in Treasury securities and $40 billion per month in mortgage-backed securities. An investment adviser is considering the implications for client portfolios. Which of the following asset classes would most likely benefit directly from this QE program?
B is correct. QE programs targeting Treasuries and MBS directly benefit long-term government bonds and mortgage-related securities. The Fed's purchases drive up prices of these specific assets. Residential mortgage REITs hold mortgage-backed securities and would benefit from both higher MBS prices (capital gains) and lower mortgage rates (increased refinancing and origination activity). This is the most direct beneficiary of the announced QE program.
A is incorrect because QE targets long-term securities, not short-term Treasury bills. Short-term rates are already managed through conventional OMO and the federal funds rate. QE is implemented when those conventional tools affecting short rates are exhausted. C is incorrect because Fed QE purchases focus on U.S. Treasury securities and agency MBS, not international bonds. While global liquidity effects may indirectly impact emerging markets, they are not direct beneficiaries of Fed purchases. D is incorrect because standard QE programs focus on Treasuries and agency MBS, not corporate credit. While lower overall rates may indirectly benefit corporate bonds through improved financing conditions, the Fed is not directly purchasing high-yield bonds or leveraged loans in this scenario.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to connect specific Fed policy tools to their direct market impacts. Understanding that QE targets specific asset classes (long-term Treasuries and MBS) helps advisers make tactical allocation decisions during QE programs. Knowing which securities the Fed is actively buying guides portfolio positioning to capture policy-driven tailwinds.
All of the following are accurate statements about quantitative easing EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). QE does NOT reduce the Fed's balance sheet. It expands the balance sheet massively. When the Fed purchases securities through QE, those assets appear on the Fed's balance sheet, and the Fed creates reserves (credits banks' accounts) to pay for them. This is balance sheet expansion, not reduction. The opposite process (selling assets to shrink the balance sheet) is called quantitative tightening (QT), not QE.
A is accurate: QE involves large-scale purchases of longer-term Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities to directly lower long-term interest rates when conventional policy can't go lower. B is accurate: QE is an unconventional policy tool used precisely when conventional tools (lowering the federal funds rate) have been exhausted because short-term rates are already at or near zero. The zero lower bound makes further rate cuts impossible. D is accurate: the primary goal of QE is to stimulate the economy by making long-term borrowing cheaper (mortgages, corporate bonds, etc.), supporting asset prices, and encouraging banks to lend rather than hold reserves.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of QE mechanics and its effects on the Fed balance sheet. Advisers must understand that QE is expansionary (balance sheet grows) while QT is contractionary (balance sheet shrinks). This distinction is critical when the Fed signals policy shifts from QE to QT, which has opposite effects on bond markets and liquidity conditions.
The Federal Reserve announces the end of its quantitative easing program and signals it will begin reducing its $8 trillion balance sheet by allowing maturing securities to roll off without replacement (quantitative tightening). Which of the following statements about this policy shift are accurate?
1. This represents a shift from expansionary to contractionary monetary policy
2. Long-term bond yields will likely rise as the Fed stops buying and becomes a net seller
3. The money supply will likely increase as maturing securities release cash into the banking system
4. This policy shift typically occurs when the Fed is concerned about inflation or overheating economy
C is correct. Statements 1, 2, and 4 are accurate.
Statement 1 is TRUE: Moving from QE (adding liquidity, expanding balance sheet) to QT (removing liquidity, shrinking balance sheet) is a shift from expansionary to contractionary monetary policy. QE stimulates; QT restrains.
Statement 2 is TRUE: When the Fed stops purchasing long-term bonds and allows its holdings to mature without replacement, it removes a major source of demand from the bond market. This reduced demand (the Fed stepping away as a buyer) puts upward pressure on yields and downward pressure on bond prices. The Fed effectively becomes a net seller by reducing its holdings.
Statement 3 is FALSE: The money supply decreases, not increases, during QT. When QE securities mature and the Fed doesn't replace them, the Fed's balance sheet shrinks and bank reserves decline. This removes money from the banking system, contracting the money supply. QT is designed to reduce liquidity, not increase it.
Statement 4 is TRUE: The Fed typically shifts from QE to QT when economic conditions have improved sufficiently and inflation risks emerge. QT is a policy normalization tool used when the Fed wants to tighten financial conditions to prevent overheating or combat rising inflation. The shift signals the economy no longer needs emergency support.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to evaluate the implications of Fed policy transitions from QE to QT. Understanding that ending QE and implementing QT creates headwinds for bonds (rising yields), reduces liquidity, and signals Fed concern about inflation is essential for portfolio management. Advisers must prepare clients for these transitions and adjust fixed-income allocations accordingly as the Fed removes policy accommodation.
💡 Memory Aid
QE = Quantitative EXPANSION: The Fed's SUPER-sized bond buying program when normal rate cuts won't work anymore. Think: "Emergency Money Printing." When interest rates hit ZERO and can't go lower, the Fed pulls out the big guns and buys MASSIVE amounts of long-term bonds ($100s of billions). This pushes bond prices UP, yields DOWN, and floods the system with cash. Remember: QE = Balance sheet EXPANDS (Fed buys). QT = Balance sheet TIGHTENS (Fed sells/stops buying). Key trigger: Used when short-term rates already at zero and economy still needs help.
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Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: