Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

STOCKS DROP AS FED RAISES INTEREST RATE

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NEW YORK — U.S. stocks slipped Wednesday after the Federal Reserve raised interest rates and said it expects to increase rates two more times by the end of the year. Investors bet that several huge deals are more likely to happen after a federal court cleared AT&T’s $85 billion purchase of Time Warner.

Wall Street was already certain the Fed would raise interest rates Wednesday. The central bank’s decision-makers also said they plan to raise rates two more times later this year for a total of four increases.

Investors had debated all year if rates would rise three or four times, and some are concerned that if rates rise that quickly, it could stifle economic growth because consumers and businesses will have to pay more to borrow money.

The Fed’s projection­s might have been unwelcome, but they weren’t a shock: For months, there have been signs the economy is getting stronger.

Another came Wednesday, when the Labor Department said wholesale prices climbed at a faster pace in May. The Fed says inflation is likely to increase and projects unemployme­nt will hit a 50-year low in a few months, and it wants to keep inflation under control.

“There was nothing terribly surprising in the announceme­nt,” said Jeremy Zirin, head of investment strategy for UBS’ global wealth management business. He said the Fed’s new forecasts “appeared largely to simply reflect the economic reality of the last two or three months.”

He added that the Fed didn’t have a big change of heart, either: The Fed’s projection­s changed because one additional policymake­r forecast four rate increases instead of three.

The ruling in the AT&T-Time Warner trial sent ripples through the media and telecommun­ications industries. Shares of Twenty-First Century Fox jumped as investors anticipate­d Comcast’s offer for Fox’s entertainm­ent businesses. It came just after trading ended, as Comcast announced a $65 billion bid. The ruling also gave investors more confidence that two big takeovers in the health care field will now go through.

The S&P 500 index fell 11.22 points, or 0.4 percent, to 2,775.63 after it closed at a four-month highTuesda­y. The Dow Jones industrial average lost 119.53 points, or 0.5 percent, to 25,201.20.

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