Business World

Fed’s regional bank boards increase pressure for hike

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THE BOARDS of directors at eight of the 12 regional Federal Reserve banks sought last month to increase the rate on direct loans from the Fed to 1.25% from 1%, according to details released by the US central bank Tuesday.

The votes mark the first time since policy makers raised the benchmark federal funds rate in December that a majority of the Fed’s regional boards backed a discount-rate increase. The votes can be a signal of whether a bank’s president favors a change in the main policy rate.

“Federal Reserve Bank directors generally indicated that economic activity had continued to expand at a moderate pace,” the July discount- rate minutes showed. “Several directors cited improvemen­ts in the housing sector, as well as steady or increasing levels of consumer spending.” Directors in Dallas and Philadelph­ia voted for an increase, joining those from Boston, Cleveland, Kansas City, Richmond, San Francisco and St. Louis — who had also favored a rate increase when they met in June. Presidents from those banks backing a discountra­te move included all four who currently hold rotating votes in the policy-making Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).

Directors in New York, Minneapoli­s, Chicago and Atlanta voted to keep the rate unchanged. Those officials “judged that the economic outlook and belowtarge­t inflation supported maintainin­g the current accommodat­ive stance of monetary policy,” according to minutes.

New York’s William Dudley is the only voting president from that group. He holds a permanent vote on the FOMC.

 ??  ?? A GUARD walks in front of an image of the Federal Reserve’s logo.
A GUARD walks in front of an image of the Federal Reserve’s logo.

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