Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Fed holds rates, stays on track for Dec increase

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WASHINGTON: The Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged and stayed on course to hike in December despite recent jitters in financial markets and a critical president.

The US central bank said “economic activity has been rising at a strong rate” and job gains “have been strong”, acknowledg­ing a drop in the unemployme­nt rate, while repeating its outlook for “further gradual” rate increases in its statement on Thursday following a two-day meeting in Washington.

Risks to the outlook appear “roughly balanced”, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) said, leaving that language unchanged from the prior meeting in late September. Inflation expectatio­ns, which have slipped slightly in recent weeks according to some measures, were described as “little changed, on balance”, the same as in the last statement.

“Absent anything new between now and the last meeting of the year, they’ll continue on with another 25 basis points increase” in December, said James Kahn, an economics professor at Yeshiva University and a former vice president at the New York Fed.

“The language is designed to try to not look too far ahead,” to give them flexibilit­y, he said.

By keeping the door open to a fourth 2018 hike in December, officials are sticking to their gradual upward path, trying to prolong the second-longest US expansion on record without making an error. Leaving monetary policy too loose risks stoking excess inflation and asset bubbles, while tightening too fast could cause a recession.

The unanimous 9-0 decision left the benchmark federal funds rate in a target range of 2-2.25%, following eight quarterpoi­nt hikes since late 2015. The interest rate the Fed pays banks on excess reserves—a tool for keeping the effective funds rate within the Fed’s target range— was left unchanged at 2.2%, as expected.

Stocks slipped and the dollar extended gains after the decision was announced, with the S&P 500 Index closing 0.3% lower at 2,806.83.

Odds of a December rate hike were about 74%, according to pricing in interest-rate futures in late New York trading.

 ?? AP/FILE ?? Jerome Powell, chairman, US Federal Reserve
AP/FILE Jerome Powell, chairman, US Federal Reserve

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