The Mercury News

Fed set to raise rates as Yellen gives final news conference

Analysts say the strengthen­ing economy will lead to more hikes in 2018

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON » Investors seem certain about this: The Federal Reserve is going to raise interest rates this week for the third time this year.

They’re less sure about what the central bank might have in store for 2018, and they will look to Janet Yellen’s final news conference as Fed chair Wednesday for any clues.

Will the Fed’s policymaki­ng change once Yellen steps down in February and is succeeded by Jerome Powell? Powell was a Yellen ally who backed her cautious stance toward rate hikes in his five years on the Fed’s board. Yet no one can know how his leadership or rate policy might depart from hers.

What’s more, Powell will be joined by several new Fed board members who, like him, are being chosen by President Donald Trump. Some analysts say they think that while Powell might not deviate much from Yellen’s rate policy, he and the new board members will adopt a looser approach to the regulation of the banking system.

Most analysts have said they

think the still-strengthen­ing U.S. economy will lead the Fed to raise rates three more times next year. A few, though, have held out the possibilit­y that a Powell-led Fed will be compelled to step up the pace of rate hikes as inflation finally picks up and the economy, perhaps helped by the Republican tax cuts, begins accelerati­ng.

“While the Fed has been indicating that they will hike rates another three times in 2018, I think Powell will depart from that forecast and the Fed will end up hiking rates four times,” said David Jones,

chief economist at DMJ Advisors. “That is based on the added growth that will come from the tax cuts.”

At his Senate confirmati­on hearing last month, Powell impressed his listeners as an evenhanded moderate who favored the kind of incrementa­l stance on rate hikes that both Yellen and her predecesso­r, Ben Bernanke, embraced. The committee approved Powell’s nomination and sent it to the full Senate, where his confirmati­on is considered certain.

Besides Powell, Trump has so far chosen two new members for the sevenmembe­r board. And he has the opening to nominate three more, including a Fed vice chair. In his view of the Fed, Trump

has made clear that he favors low rates. But he has also expressed a desire to pull back on many of the regulation­s that were imposed on banks after the 2008 financial crisis. Trump and many Republican­s argue that those regulation­s are too burdensome, especially for smaller banks.

It was in the midst of the 2008 crisis that the Fed cut its key rate to a record low near zero and left it there for seven years. Eventually under Yellen, the Fed responded to a steadily improving job market and economy by modestly raising the rate — in December 2015, in December 2016 and twice this year. Since June, the policymake­rs have left rates alone while puzzling over why inflation has slipped farther below their 2 percent annual target.

The widespread expectatio­n that the Fed will raise rates three additional times next year — possibly causing higher rates on some consumer and business loans — comes from the Fed’s socalled “dot plot.” The dot plot, updated quarterly, displays the anonymous projection­s of individual Fed officials for the path of their benchmark rate as well as for inflation and economic growth. The dot plot, which the Fed will update when its policy meeting ends Wednesday, most recently showed an expectatio­n of three rate increases in 2018.

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Yellen

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