Los Angeles Times

FED CUTS ITS KEY INTEREST RATE, AS EXPECTED

The central bank indicates that more cuts are unlikely this year amid fresh signs of a slowing economy.

- By Don Lee

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve made another interest rate cut on Wednesday, but Fed Chairman Jerome H. Powell poured cold water on the idea that more rate cuts were coming down the pike.

The Fed, as expected, lowered its benchmark rate by a quarter of a point for the third straight time, to a range of 1.5% to 1.75%.

Fed officials have described the rate cut as essentiall­y an insurance against the risks to the American economy from the U.S.China trade war and weakening global growth, which are threatenin­g to undercut what since the summer has been the longest economic expansion in U.S. history.

Earlier Wednesday, the Commerce Department said U.S. economic growth slowed further in the third quarter, with business investment­s and net exports contractin­g for the second straight quarter, even as the housing market gained momentum and consumer spending grew at a slower but still healthy pace.

Trade friction between the globe’s two largest economies has disrupted business operations and spending, as have other risks and uncertaint­ies such as Britain’s messy exit from the European Union.

Powell made clear, how

ever, that the U.S. central bank, after making three successive rate cuts since July, was hitting the pause button.

He suggested that the Fed had done enough in light of continued moderate growth in the U.S. economy as well as an improvemen­t in the outlook, particular­ly with the tentative “Phase 1” trade agreement announced by Trump earlier this month.

“We believe that monetary policy is in a good place,” Powell said at a news conference Wednesday upon conclusion of the Fed’s two-day meeting and release of its official statement.

The statement was more vague about the Fed’s likely future path of interest rates, but Powell said that it would take a significan­t developmen­t in the economy to cause “a material reassessme­nt of our outlook” for another Fed rate cut.

That could be a sizable drop in job growth or consumer spending, which have been the pillars of the economy, as well as a worsening of trade tensions.

Investors were widely expecting Wednesday’s quarter-point cut, and also appeared to be looking for the Fed to keep the door open on future rate reductions. Futures markets were betting that there was a 25% chance of another quarter-point rate cut at the Fed’s last meeting of the year on Dec. 10-11.

Stock markets nonetheles­s rose after Powell spoke. Even though Powell tamped down hopes for another rate cut, investors apparently took heart in his remarks that the Fed could be sitting on the new very low rate for a long time.

“We would need to see a really significan­t move up in inflation that’s persistent before we would consider raising rates to address inflation concerns,” Powell said. Inflation has been running below the Fed’s 2% target for years, and many analysts don’t see it rising fast anytime soon.

With Wednesday’s cut, the Fed’s key interest rate stands at less than the rate of inflation and, Powell said, “will continue to provide significan­t support for the economy.”

Analysts, however, aren’t so sure. The latest rate cut, like the two earlier ones, was telegraphe­d weeks earlier and has already been priced into stock markets. And mortgage rates have fallen by more than a full percentage point from last November, more than the total of the Fed’s rate cuts, to an average of 3.75% for a 30-year fixed loan as of last week.

“We’re not going to get more good medicine for this economy,” said Christophe­r Rupkey, chief economist at MUFG Union Bank in New York.

Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Assn. of Realtors, said the Fed’s actions have without doubt helped boost a lackluster housing market. But he noted that there are many constraint­s for faster growth in housing, including unaffordab­ly high prices and difficulti­es getting building permits.

In the third quarter, housing made an outsized contributi­on to the U.S. economy, which grew at an annual rate of 1.9%, the Commerce

Department said. That was down from 2% in the second quarter and 3.1% in the first three months of this year.

Although that’s still moderate growth, and fears of imminent recession have eased in recent weeks, the Commerce Department report showed the damage already inflicted by the trade war. U.S. business investment­s and net exports both fell for the second straight quarter, joining U.S. manufactur­ing in a recession.

Powell said, however, that he didn’t see evidence the weakness in manufactur­ing or business investment­s was spilling into consumer spending.

“What we continue to see is good job creation,” he said. “Unemployme­nt has declined again,” he said, noting that it is now at a 50-year low.

“So it’s very positive,” Powell added. “The consumers are doing well and are focused on, you know, the good job market and rising incomes. And that’s their principal focus. So that is the thing that’s pushing the economy forward, and it doesn’t seem to have been affected so far by weakness in the other areas.”

Powell has been under heavy pressure from President Trump to make big rate cuts, and his signal Wednesday that the Fed would be pausing for now is likely to draw more ire from the White House.

As in the past, Powell declined Wednesday to comment when asked about Trump’s remarks about the economy.

 ?? Michael Reynolds EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? FED CHAIRMAN Jerome H. Powell said, “We believe that monetary policy is in a good place.”
Michael Reynolds EPA/Shuttersto­ck FED CHAIRMAN Jerome H. Powell said, “We believe that monetary policy is in a good place.”

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