The Fed repeated it would be "patient" in deciding when to raise
benchmark borrowing costs from zero, though it also acknowledged a
decline in certain inflation measures.
After a two-day meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee,
policymakers struck an upbeat tone on the U.S. economy's prospects
and held to their view that energy-led weakness in inflation would
dissipate.
"The committee, in fact, was downright bullish on current economic
conditions and the outlook," said Paul Edelstein, director of
financial economics at IHS Global Insight.
In making its announcement, the Fed largely skirted slumping
economies in Europe and Asia, saying only that it would take
"financial and international developments" into account when
determining when to raise rates, adding a reference to global
markets for the first time since January 2013.
"Economic activity has been expanding at a solid pace," the Fed said
in a statement that marked an upgrade to its prior assessment of a
"moderate pace" of growth. "Labor market conditions have improved
further, with strong job gains and a lower unemployment rate."
Long-term U.S. bond yields fell as some investors focused on the
Fed's reference to international developments and weak inflation,
potentially widening the gap between the central bank's language and
what markets expect policymakers to do. The dollar strengthened
against a broad basket of currencies.
"Just the inclusion of international development, that's probably
perceived as dovish and the bond market is rallying probably on
that," said Jim O'Sullivan, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency
Economics. O'Sullivan added that "at the end of the day, the
baseline is still June for lift-off," and said that the falling
unemployment rate remains a key gauge for the Fed.
'PATIENT'
The Fed's stance stands in sharp contrast to many of its peers in
developed countries that have recently eased monetary policy to
boost struggling economies. That was led by the European Central
Bank's 1 trillion euro bond-buying program to stimulate the euro
zone's economy.
"You would have thought that if you were going to really postpone (a
rate hike) to 2016 there would have been some more emphasis on
international events and the dollar," said John Silva, an economist
at Wells Fargo in Charlotte, North Carolina.
The policy divergence has helped push the U.S. dollar to multi-year
highs, a looming concern for the Fed given the move's negative
impact on U.S. exporters and inflation.
Many Fed officials have pointed to a possible rate increase around
mid-year, but they again left the door open to a later move. "The
committee judges that it can be patient in beginning to normalize
the stance of monetary policy," the Fed said.
The central bank acknowledged inflation had declined further below
its 2 percent target and that market-based price gauges had fallen
substantially - a more negative assessment than it gave in December.
[to top of second column] |
The Fed also provided a time frame for its inflation view, saying it
expects inflation to rise gradually toward its goal over the "medium
term."
Fed officials have said they could being raising rates even if
inflation remains stuck at a low level, confident that economic
growth and job gains will eventually produce rising prices. They
also view the initial "liftoff" as the start of an extended,
years-long process in which rates will remain far below normal and
continue to boost investment and spending.
The latest statement follows a policy shift begun in December when
the Fed first said it would take a patient approach to raising
rates. At that time, Fed Chair Janet Yellen made clear that
"patient" meant at least two meetings.
That statement all but ruled out a move this month and in March,
with investors now watching for when the 'patient' reference is
dropped, which will likely signal the Fed is ready to move. While
Yellen has tied any rate hike rate to incoming economic data, the
June meeting and its scheduled press conference would appear to be
the central bank's earliest opportunity.
In December, the Fed said that approach was consistent with its
previous guidance of keeping rates near zero for a "considerable
time." The statement on Wednesday removed the reference to its
former guidance.
Four new regional Fed presidents - Atlanta's Dennis Lockhart,
Chicago's Charles Evans, Richmond's Jeffrey Lacker and San
Francisco's John Williams - rotated into voting positions for this
week's policy meeting. With the exception of Lacker, an inflation
hawk, they are largely dovish central bankers who have favored
keeping rates low throughout the recovery from the 2007-2009
financial crisis.
Wednesday's statement was adopted without dissent, a sign that
Yellen was able to reach consensus with the new voting group.
(Reporting by Michael Flaherty and Howard Schneider; Additional
reporting by Luciana Lopez in New York; Editing by Tim Ahmann and
Paul Simao)
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