USA TODAY US Edition

Further shaking up Fed, N.Y.’s Dudley is retiring

Fed president leaving next year, won’t serve out term

- Nathan Bomey and Paul Davidson

William Dudley, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, is set to retire six months before his term expires, further shaking up the Fed’s interest rate-setting committee.

Dudley, 64, will exit in mid-2018 instead of serving out a term that would have lasted until January 2019.

The New York Fed chief serves as vice chairman of the crucial Fed committee that sets interest rates, giving him significan­t influence over monetary policy. Dudley also played a central role in guiding the Fed’s response to the 2008 financial crisis.

Dudley is among the core members of the policymaki­ng committee, and his views were typically in line with those of Fed Chair Janet Yellen. He’s generally considered a “dove” by Fed watchers, meaning he tends to focus more on keeping interest rates low to bolster the economy and employment rather than on lifting rates to head off inflation.

The Fed, however, is poised to raise rates in December for a third time in

2017 and has penciled in three more hikes next year amid an improving economy that’s likely to eventually spur faster inflation.

Dudley has staunchly backed the strategy of gradual rate increases. The Fed also has begun reducing the

$4.5 trillion asset portfolio it amassed during and after the financial crisis in an effort to push down long-term rates. Shrinking the balance sheet is likely to nudge those rates higher.

Dudley became president and CEO of the New York Fed in the depths of the Great Recession on Jan. 27, 2009, and earned appointmen­ts in the role in 2011 and 2016. He had joined the New York Fed in 2007.

“I have deeply appreciate­d Bill Dudley’s enormous contributi­ons to the FOMC, his wise counsel and warm friendship throughout the years of the financial crisis and its aftermath,” Yellen said in a statement. “The American economy is stronger and the financial system safer because of his many thoughtful contributi­ons. The Federal Reserve System and the country owe him a debt of gratitude.”

Dudley said, “I am extremely proud of the work we have done in New York, and as a System, from our efforts to help the nation navigate the financial crisis to beginning the process of normalizin­g the balance sheet to our work on reforming the culture of the financial services industry.”

Dudley’s departure comes after President Trump last week announced his proposed appointmen­t of Fed Governor Jerome Powell as Yellen’s replacemen­t. He will take the helm in February. Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer also recently announced his departure.

All told, Trump can fill three seats on the Fed’s board of governors, a panel that doesn’t include Dudley and the other Fed regional bank chiefs. Board members sit on the interest-rate policy committee and also pass banking regulation­s. A fourth seat would open if Yellen steps down from the board after her term as chair ends in February.

Another Trump-appointed board member, Randy Quarles, vice president of banking supervisio­n, took office last month.

 ??  ?? William Dudley, right, chats with Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, center, and then-vice chairman Stanley Fischer at a symposium in Wyoming in August. BRENNAN LINSLEY/AP
William Dudley, right, chats with Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, center, and then-vice chairman Stanley Fischer at a symposium in Wyoming in August. BRENNAN LINSLEY/AP

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