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US growth expansion to spur Fed rate hikes

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US central bankers sent a strong message on Wednesday that an expansion with “substantia­l underlying economic momentum” could sustain additional increases in interest rates this year.

Federal Reserve officials “anticipate­d that the rate of economic growth in 2018 would exceed their estimates of its sustainabl­e longer-run pace and that labour market conditions would strengthen further,” the minutes of their January 30 and 31 meeting released in Washington on Wednesday showed. A number of participan­ts “indicated that they had marked up their forecasts for economic growth in the near term relative to those made for the December meeting.”

Their collective position on inflation, meanwhile, remained one of cautious optimism that it will move toward their 2 per cent target in the medium term.

Stocks reversed gains and bond yields rose after the minutes revealed a more hawkish posture among Fed officials. The S&P 500 Index ended the day down 0.6 per cent after being up as much as 1.2 per cent earlier. The yield on 10-year Treasuries rose to 2.9 per cent – a four-year high – at 4pm in New York.

The minutes also marked the end of chairwoman Janet Yellen’s tenure at the central bank, as she turned the reins over to Jerome Powell in early February.

The new chairman appears before the House Financial Services Committee for his semi-annual testimony on February 28, and economic reports since the Federal Open Market Committee last met are unlikely to change the message from the January policy statement that said “further gradual increases” in interest rates are in store for the economy.

Data released after the Fed meeting showed the unemployme­nt rate holding at 4.1 per cent in January, while the consumer price index, excluding food and energy, was 1.8 per cent for the 12-month period. Retail sales unexpected­ly declined from the prior month.

The key question facing policy makers is now one of pace – whether three hikes or four will be sufficient to keep supply and demand in balance as corporatio­ns take advantage of lower tax rates and aggressive incentives to ramp up investment resulting from the fiscal stimulus signed into law in December.

“The Fed is finding more confidence in their baseline outlook,” said Harm Bandholz, chief US economist at UniCredit Bank, who is forecastin­g three more rate increases for 2018. “The risk of four” rate hikes “is higher than two.”

Fed officials estimated economic growth at 2.5 per cent for 2018 in December. Private analysts have boosted their outlook to 2.6 per cent, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey. Stocks peaked on January 26 before tumbling at the start of February, and longer-term government bond yields began to climb on the prospects of larger amounts of Treasury issuance.

Participan­ts also discussed numerous uncertaint­ies about the outlook, the minutes showed. Several cautioned that “imbalances in financial markets may begin to emerge as the economy continued to operate above potential”, the minutes said. Fed officials also speculated on whether the tax cuts would translate into higher compensati­on for employees.

“It was noted that the pace of wage gains might not increase appreciabl­y if productivi­ty growth remains low,” the minutes said. “That said, a number of participan­ts judged that the continued tightening in labor markets was likely to translate into faster wage increases at some point.”

 ?? AP ?? Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen’s tenure is now over
AP Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen’s tenure is now over

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