Bangkok Post

KEEPING HER COUNSEL

Fed chair Janet Yellen signals a slower pace of rate hikes and stays mum on the possibilit­y of a second term.

- MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON: Federal Reserve chairwoman Janet Yellen raised the possibilit­y on Wednesday that the Fed would consider slowing the pace of its interest rate increases if inflation remained persistent­ly below its target level.

For the moment, Yellen signaled no change in policy, indicating that the three rate hikes since December will likely be followed by one more hike this year.

She also said the Fed wanted to begin gradually trimming its massive $4.5 trillion in bond holdings later this year, a move that will also put upward pressure on interest rates.

But Wall Street investors took heart from her slightly more cautious view of a recent puzzling slowdown in inflation, believing it could signal that the Fed that might be willing to put further rate hikes on pause.

“Monetary policy is not on a pre-set course,’’ Yellen told lawmakers on the House Financial Services Committee. “We’re watching it very closely and stand ready to adjust our policy if it appears that the inflation undershoot will be persistent.’’

The Fed’s key policy rate, the federal funds rate, currently stands in a range of 1% to 1.25%. The last three increases occurred in December, March and June. Many analysts believe the Fed will raise rates one more time this year, either in September or December.

Yellen’s appearance took on a bit of a valedictor­y tone, given that her current four-year term as chair will end in early February before the next round of congressio­nal hearings.

At one point, she acknowledg­ed that her appearance on Wednesday before the House panel and on Thursday before the Senate Finance Committee could be her last time to present the Fed’s semi-annual Monetary Policy Report to Congress.

Yellen, the first woman to head the Fed in the central bank’s 100 year history, was asked several times if she would accept another term if President Donald Trump offered it.

She didn’t provide a direct answer. “I am very focused on trying to achieve our congressio­nally mandated objectives and I really haven’t had to give further thought at this point to the question of serving a second term,’’ Yellen told Rep Carolyn Maloney, D-New York.

In her testimony, Yellen took note of a number of encouragin­g factors, including strong job gains and rising household wealth that she said should fuel economic growth over the next two years.

Yellen repeated the message she has been sending all year that the US economy no longer needs the extraordin­ary support the central bank began providing in 2008 in the wake of a severe financial crisis and the deepest recession since the 1930s.

Since the depths of the recession, unemployme­nt is now down to 4.4%, near a 16-year low. And while the economy started the year with a sluggish growth rate of just 1.4%, it has regained momentum in recent months, helped by strong job gains, a revival of business investment and a strengthen­ing of overseas economies.

But Yellen cautioned that “considerab­le uncertaint­y always attends the economic outlook.’’ Those include whether inflation will indeed pick up, as well as questions about how much of Trump’s economic programme will make it through Congress.

At its June meeting, the Fed signaled that it expected to begin shrinking its $4.5 trillion balance sheet later this year, a step that could push up longer-term rates for such items as home mortgages.

In her testimony, Yellen repeated the Fed’s plans to increase the level of bonds that will be sold off each month at a gradual rate to give markets time to adjust.

At its June meeting, the Fed announced that it planned to begin reducing its holdings by $10 billion per month and Yellen said on Wednesday that she still hoped that effort could begin “relatively soon.’’

The Fed’s holdings have surged five-fold since 2008, ballooning in size as the Fed bought Treasury and mortgage bonds as a way to put downward pressure on longterm interest rates.

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