GLOSSARY

monetary policy

Monetary policy might sound abstract, but you see its effect every day in rates, credit conditions, and market swings. When the central bank shifts its stance, client behavior often changes with it.

This guide explains what monetary policy is, why it matters for your investment decisions, and how it can shape portfolio mix and risk. Keep it handy when you walk clients through the next policy move.

What is monetary policy?

Monetary policy is the central bank's playbook for managing money and credit in an economy. In the US, it covers the Federal Reserve's actions and communications aimed at maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long‑term interest rates, as directed by Congress. Monetary policy focuses on the overall supply of money and the cost of borrowing across the system, not on individual sectors or companies.

The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 gave the Fed primary responsibility for setting US monetary policy, a role it still holds today. In practice, this means the Fed adjusts conditions in money and credit markets to guide inflation and employment toward its mandate.

If you work with clients, knowing how monetary policy works helps you read market moves more clearly. To see how leading professionals navigate that environment, check out our special report on the top financial professionals in the US.

How does monetary policy work?

Monetary policy works by changing how much money is available in the economy and how expensive it is to borrow. The Federal Reserve adjusts money and credit conditions to support its legal goals of promoting:

  • maximum employment
  • stable prices

Types of monetary policy

In practice, the central bank works with two broad stances of monetary policy:

1. Contractionary monetary policy

Contractionary policy raises interest rates and limits the growth of the money supply to cool demand. Higher borrowing costs can slow spending, business activity, and hiring, which helps bring down inflation.

2. Expansionary monetary policy

By contrast, expansionary policy lowers interest rates and increases the money supply to support demand. Cheaper borrowing can lift business investment, household spending, and hiring, which helps an economy during slowdowns or recessions.

The table below highlights the key differences between contractionary and expansionary monetary policy:

CONTRACTIONARY VS. EXPANSIONARY MONETARY POLICY
Stance Goals Actions Effects
Contractionary
  • Fight high inflation
  • Cool down an overheated economy
  • Sell government bonds
  • Raise discount rate
  • Raise reserve requirements
  • Higher interest rates
  • Less money in circulation
  • Reduced borrowing
  • Decreased spending
  • Slower economic growth
  • Potential job cuts
Expansionary
  • Combat recession
  • Increase aggregate demand
  • Boost employment
  • Buy government bonds (open market operations)
  • Lower discount rate
  • Lower reserve requirements
  • Lower interest rates
  • More money in circulation
  • Increased borrowing, investment, and economic growth

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) makes decisions based on economic conditions, primarily inflation and employment levels, to stay within its dual goals. Each stance, however, comes with a trade-off:

  • contractionary: good for inflation, bad for jobs
  • expansionary: good for jobs, bad for inflation

Visit and bookmark our Investing News Section for easy access to the latest shifts on monetary policy and their impact on investments.

Monetary policy tools

These are tools that the central bank uses to change money and credit conditions. Traditionally, the Federal Reserve uses three main tools to steer short-term interest rates and the supply of bank reserves.

1. Open market operations

Open market operations (OMOs) are the Fed's day‑to‑day buying and selling of securities in financial markets. By purchasing securities, the Fed adds reserves to the banking system and puts downward pressure on short‑term interest rates. Selling securities drains reserves and tends to push those rates higher.

The FOMC sets the short-term objective for these operations, usually a target range for the federal funds rate. Traders at the New York Fed then conduct transactions with primary dealers to keep market rates trading near that target. For advisors, changes in the fed funds target often foreshadow shifts in yields across the curve.

2. Discount rates

The discount rate is the interest rate the Federal Reserve charges eligible institutions that borrow directly from its discount window. These loans give banks a backstop source of liquidity when they need short-term funding and have adequate collateral.

By raising or lowering the discount rate, the Fed can influence banks' funding costs and how freely they extend credit to households and businesses. When the rate is higher, banks tend to be more cautious about borrowing from the Fed and passing on credit. When it is lower, the discount window can help support the smooth flow of credit during stress.

3. Reserve requirements

Reserve requirements set the minimum share of certain deposits that depository institutions must hold, either in their vaults or on account at the Fed. These ratios are defined in Regulation D and apply to specific categories of transaction accounts and other liabilities.

Changing reserve requirements alters how much of each deposit dollar banks can lend or invest. Higher requirements tie up more funds in reserves and can restrict credit growth, while lower requirements free up funds for loans and securities purchases. Even though formal reserve requirements have shifted over time, the concept remains important for understanding how regulation shapes bank balance sheets and liquidity.

How does the Federal Reserve implement monetary policy?

The FOMC conducts monetary policy by setting the target range for the federal funds rate. That rate is the Fed's main policy rate and is chosen to support its dual mandate for employment and inflation. After each regular meeting, the FOMC votes to leave, raise, or lower that target range and explains its decision in a public statement and press conference.

Once the target range is set, the Fed uses its monetary policy tools to keep the effective federal funds rate trading within that range. Adjustments in the policy tools help align market interest rates with the FOMC's stance, so broader financial conditions match its chosen level of ease or tightness.

To sum things up, implementation of monetary policy follows a two-step process:

  • The FOMC conducts monetary policy by adjusting the target range for the federal funds rate.
  • The Fed implements monetary policy by using its tools to ensure that market interest rates are at levels consistent with the FOMC's target

This process links the Committee's policy decisions to the borrowing costs that matter for households, businesses, and markets.

The Fed describes its latest decisions and the reasoning behind them on the Board of Governors website. You can review the most recent FOMC statement and press conference here to see how policymakers are framing current conditions.

How does monetary policy impact investments?

Monetary policy shapes the level and path of interest rates, which feed directly into asset prices and expected returns. When the Fed eases or tightens, it changes borrowing costs, discount rates, and risk appetite across markets, so each asset class reacts differently.

Stocks

Stocks represent ownership in companies and depend on earnings growth, financing costs, and investor risk appetite.

  • expansionary policy: lower short-term rates and easier credit often support higher equity prices as borrowing costs fall and investors take more risk, especially in growth names
  • contractionary policy: higher rates and tighter credit can weigh on equities as financing becomes more expensive and investors rotate toward higher-yielding fixed income

Here's what new investors need to know about investing in stocks.

Bonds

Bonds are fixed-income securities with prices that move inversely to yields.

  • expansionary policy: falling policy rates and lower market yields tend to lift existing bond prices, since their coupons look more attractive than new issues at lower rates
  • contractionary policy: rising rates usually pressure bond prices as investors demand higher yields, which pushes down the value of older, lower-coupon bonds

Get practical tips and strategies on how to invest in bonds in this guide.

Cash and savings

Cash and savings accounts provide liquidity and limited market risk but depend heavily on short-term interest rates.

  • expansionary policy: low policy rates often mean low deposit yields, so cash and cash equivalents may lag other assets in nominal return during easy policy periods
  • contractionary policy: higher short-term rates can make insured deposits, money market funds, and other cash vehicles more attractive, although inflation can still erode real returns

Find out how RIAs can maximize cash management in client portfolios in this article.

Real estate

Real estate investments rely on financing costs, rental income, and property values, all of which are sensitive to interest rates.

  • expansionary policy: lower mortgage and financing rates can support housing demand and commercial deals, often helping property values and some real estate securities
  • contractionary policy: higher rates raise debt-service costs, which can cool demand from homeowners and investors and put pressure on transaction volumes and prices

For advisors, the key is to link the current policy stance to these asset-class patterns rather than react only to headlines. From there, you can adjust portfolio mix, time horizons, and risk budgets in line with your clients' goals and constraints.

Effective portfolio management strategies during monetary policy changes

When monetary policy shifts, portfolios feel it through changing rates, liquidity, and risk sentiment. Advisors who plan ahead on duration, diversification, and client messaging are in a better position to manage drawdowns and capture new opportunities.

Here are some strategies that investment advisors and RIAs can use:

Proactive portfolio adjustment

Proactive management starts with understanding how rate changes filter through fixed income and risk assets. When rates are rising, you might trim long-duration bond exposure and add short- or intermediate-term paper that is less sensitive to price declines. Bond ladders can also help you roll maturing bonds into new issues at higher yields over time.

Portfolio diversification

Diversification helps smooth returns when policy shifts unsettle a single asset class. You can tilt toward higher-quality issuers and business models when volatility picks up. At the same time, you can use sectors or instruments that help offset interest-rate drag, such as select equities or higher-yielding bonds. For some clients, a measured allocation to alternatives or inflation-linked securities can add extra protection against policy-driven shocks.

Clear client communication and behavioral coaching

Even a well-built portfolio can fail if clients abandon the plan at the wrong time. Explain how specific monetary policy moves affect their holdings, then tie that back to their time horizon and goals. Use simple scenarios to show the trade-offs of "doing nothing" versus making thoughtful, incremental changes, and discourage emotional, all-or-nothing shifts.

Monetary policy will keep changing, but a consistent framework for adjustments, diversification, and communication can help you guide clients through each cycle. The goal is not to guess every Fed move, but to keep portfolios aligned with the plan you built together.

The latest monetary policy news

Displaying 301 results
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With the Federal Reserve poised to achieve an economic feat, the fixed income giant sees a sweet spot in middle-of-the-curve securities.

Yields jump to 4% for 10-year US Treasuries as traders weigh 'no landing' scenario
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Could the US economy not only avoid slowdown but reignite inflationary influences?