Sun.Star Cebu

As Fed ends meeting, few expect much clarity on next hike

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WASHINGTON — With consumers spending and employers hiring more freely, the US economy has fared better of late. But when the Federal Reserve ends its latest policy meeting Wednesday, most analysts think it will signal that it wants to see further gains before raising interest rates again.

The Fed is expected to issue a statement that acknowledg­es the strengthen­ing economy without providing much clarity about when the next rate hike might occur.

Still, some Fed-watchers say the wait may not be much longer. In the eight weeks between this week’s meeting and the next in September, the Fed will see a flurry of fresh economic data, including two monthly jobs reports. If the new figures show sustained improvemen­t, September might be when the Fed decides to resume the rate increases it began in December.

“If we get decent economic news between now and September, I think the odds are good that the Fed will move,” said David Jones, chief economist at DMJ Advisors. “It is still a data-dependent story, but I think the Fed will know enough by then to move.”

Jones foresees two modest rate hikes this year, one in September, the other in December. And he said investors may not have to wait until September to know what the Fed is thinking. Jones suggested that Chair Janet Yellen may use her speech at the Federal Reserve’s annual late-summer conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to put investors on notice of a coming rate hike.

A few months ago, it was widely assumed that the Fed would have resumed raising rates by now. But that was before the US government issued a bleak May jobs report and Britain’s vote to quit the European Union triggered a brief investor panic. Since then, though, a resurgent US economy, a bounce-back in hiring and record highs for stocks have led many economists to once again start looking for a rate hike.

The Fed’s statement Wednesday may nod toward welcome signs of a strengthen­ed job market: In June, employers added 287,000 jobs, the most since October 2015, and analysts are forecastin­g solid more solid gains in coming months.

In December, the Fed raised its benchmark rate from a record low near zero, where it had stood since the depths of the 2008 financial crisis. It also laid out a timetable for up to four additional rate hikes this year. But as 2016 began, intensifie­d fears about China’s economy, the world’s second-largest, and a plunge in oil prices sent markets sinking and led the Fed to delay any further action.

Once the markets stabilized, the Fed signaled a likely rate increase by midyear. Anemic hiring in April and May, though, raised concerns about the economy, and Fed officials left rates alone. The central bank was also affected by Britain’s forthcomin­g vote on whether to leave the EU, anticipati­on of which had rattled investors.

When Britain did vote to leave the union and markets sank, some econ- omists even suggested that the Fed’s next move might be to cut, rather than raise, rates. Now, though, the pendulum has swung back, especially after the arrival of a reassuring June jobs report and a big rebound on Wall Street.

The economy is also picking up after the year’s anemic start. Stronger consumer spending is thought to have lifted growth, as measured by the gross domestic product, from a 1.1 percent annual rate in the January-March quarter to an expected 2.5 percent in the April-June quarter. In the spring, consumers boosted spending to what could be the fastest pace in a decade. Economists also foresee a lift from business investment, reflecting a rebound from cutbacks in the energy sector.

All that strength might argue for September rate hike, especially if monthly job growth equals as least 200,000 between now and then. Still, the risks of raising rates again too soon and possibly choking off economic activity may seem greater to the Fed than the risks of waiting longer. (AP)

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