Dayton Daily News

Fed raises interest rate a quarter point

Move intended to fight inflation as economy improves.

- By Ana Swanson

The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate Wednesday, launching into what is expected to be a more rapid series of increases that is intended to ward off inflation but will also raise costs for Americans who borrow money to finance mortgages, auto loans and credit card purchases.

Fed officials voted to raise the central bank’s key interest rate for overnight lending by a quarter point, from a range of 0.5 percent to 0.75 percent to a range of 0.75 percent to 1 percent. Bank officials announced the decision following a two-day policy meeting in Washington.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose following the announceme­nt to close at 20,950, up 112 points.

The Fed has long planned on raising interest rates to a more normal level, after slashing them to nearly zero during the financial crisis and holding them at an ultra-low level for years to stimulate a sluggish economy. After some tentative steps, Wednesday’s hike signals a significan­t transition.

“This is a sea change for them, to start talk about raising rates at a faster pace,” said Blu Putnam, CME Group’s chief economist.

The Fed’s decision could also frustrate the ambitious goals of the Trump administra­tion, including boosting growth rates to a pace not seen in years and reviving manufactur­ing and exports. By raising the cost of borrowing, higher interest rates tend to dampen growth. They also attract investment to the United States, which pushes up the value of the dollar and makes U.S. exports comparativ­ely expensive abroad.

Investors were well-prepared for the move, as Fed officials have made numerous speeches telegraphi­ng their decision in recent weeks. Before Wednesday’s announceme­nt, futures markets pointed to a 95 percent probabilit­y of the rate hike.

The Fed carried out its first rate increase since the global financial crisis in December 2015, and another in December 2016. But the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the U.S. presidenti­al election and persistent threats to global growth, such as a stock market crash in China last year, persuaded the Fed to otherwise hold off.

“It feels like we are at a transition to somewhat more regular increases,” said Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at J. P. Morgan. In the past, the Fed “just didn’t get the global headroom” to be able to raise rates, he said. “I think for now the coast looks clear.”

The Fed has long insisted that it will match the pace of its interest rate hikes to the progress of the economy. And in recent months, the U.S. economy has finally showed signs of heating up. While gross domestic product, a broad measure of economic growth, remains disappoint­ing low, the unemployme­nt rate has fallen below the Fed’s long-term projection­s, companies continue to add hundreds of thousands of jobs per month, and there are signs that a long-absent increase in inflation could be just around the corner.

Given these more encouragin­g signs, the Fed is eager to move interest rates away from what economists call the zero-lower bound — meaning interest rates hovering around zero percent. That would give the Fed room to cut rates to stimulate the economy in the event of economic troubles in the future.

Some argue that by raising rates too quickly, the Fed risks choking off progress for the poorest Americans, just as they dig themselves out of the recession. But others say that, by delaying, the Fed risks inflating asset bubbles in the market or letting inflation get out of hand — something market watchers term “falling behind the curve.”

“The Fed still has their foot on the monetary accelerato­r almost to the floorboard. They have to take that foot off,” said Steven Rick, chief economist at CUNA Mutual Group. “We’re concerned that maybe they are behind the curve.”

“The economy can absorb these rate hikes, and it’s past time we got on with it,” said Joe Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM US.

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