The Borneo Post

Sooner than expected, US Fed feels its time to hike

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WASHINGTON: The US Federal Reserve is poised to raise its benchmark interest rate amid burgeoning job growth and a surge of market optimism since President Donald Trump took office.

Central bankers likely got the final push they needed, if they were in any doubt, after a strong employment showing 235,000 net new jobs created in February and the unemployme­nt rate moving down a tenth of a point to 4.7 per cent.

Even before the jobs report, and despite lingering questions about Trump’s economic agenda, key figures on the Federal Open Market Committee ( FOMC), which sets the federal funds rate, were sending clear signals that a rate increase was likely.

The FOMC is due to announce its decision at the end of the two- day meeting on Wednesday.

Fed vice chairman Stanley Fischer said recently that if there had been a “conscious effort” among Fed members to raise the public’s expectatio­ns, “I’m about to join it.”

Analysts who are widely expecting a move note the central bank largely has met its targets for unemployme­nt and inflation, despite some sour notes in other data.

“They’ve virtually achieved their dual mandate,” Mickey Levy, chief Americas economist at Berenberg Capital Markets, told AFP.

“This is really a simple decision.”

On Friday afternoon, the Fed fund futures market put the probabilit­y of a 25-basis-point increase at 93 per cent.

The world’s largest economy has steadily pumped out new jobs since mid-2016, with the three-month average for job creation at 209,000 for December through February.

And the unemployme­nt rate has remained below five per cent since May.

Meanwhile, in January the price index for personal consumptio­n expenditur­es, the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, hit its fastest annual pace in more than four years, reaching 1.9 per cent, just shy of the two percent target.

And consumer confidence in February was at a 15-year high.

However, in remarks earlier this month, Fed Governor Lael Brainard, among the most dovish of FOMC members, said there could be “room for further improvemen­t” in the economy.

While generally supportive of raising rates, Brainard said socalled core PCE, an inflation measure that excludes volatile food and fuel prices, has been below the Fed target for most of the past eight years. — AFP

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? The US Federal Reserve is poised to raise its benchmark interest rate amid burgeoning job growth and a surge of market optimism since President Donald Trump took office.
— Reuters photo The US Federal Reserve is poised to raise its benchmark interest rate amid burgeoning job growth and a surge of market optimism since President Donald Trump took office.

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