Fed raises interest rates, signals more
hikes ahead
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[December 20, 2018]
By Ann Saphir and Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - After weeks of
market volatility and calls by President Donald Trump for the Federal
Reserve to stop raising interest rates, the U.S. central bank instead
did it again, and stuck by a plan to keep withdrawing support from an
economy it views as strong.
U.S. stocks and bond yields fell hard. With the Fed signaling "some
further gradual" rate hikes and no break from cutting its massive bond
portfolio, traders fretted that policymakers could choke off economic
growth.
"Maybe they have already committed their policy error," said Fritz Folts,
chief investment strategist at 3Edge Asset Management. "We would be in
the camp that they have already raised rates too much."
Interest rate futures show traders are currently betting the Fed won't
raise rates at all next year.
Wednesday's rate increase, the fourth of the year, pushed the central
bank's key overnight lending rate to a range of 2.25 percent to 2.50
percent.
In a news conference after the release of the policy statement, Fed
Chairman Jerome Powell said the central bank would continue trimming its
balance sheet by $50 billion each month, and left open the possibility
that continued strong data could force it to raise rates to the point
where they start to brake the economy's momentum.
Powell did bow to what he called recent "softening" in global growth,
tighter financial conditions, and expectations the U.S. economy will
slow next year, and said that with inflation expected to remain a touch
below the Fed's 2 percent target next year, policymakers can be
"patient."
Fresh economic forecasts showed officials at the median now see only two
more rate hikes next year compared to the three projected in September.
But another message was clear in the statement issued after the Fed's
last policy meeting of the year as well as in Powell's comments: The
U.S. economy continues to perform well and no longer needs the Fed's
support either through lower-than-normal interest rates or by
maintaining of a massive balance sheet.
"Policy does not need to be accommodative," he said.
In its statement, the Fed said risks to the economy were "roughly
balanced" but that it would "continue to monitor global economic and
financial developments and assess their implications for the economic
outlook."
The Fed also made a widely expected technical adjustment, raising the
rate it pays on banks' excess reserves by just 20 basis points to give
it better control over the policy rate and keep it within the targeted
range.
CHOPPY WATERS
The decision to raise borrowing costs again is likely to anger Trump,
who has repeatedly attacked the central bank's tightening this year as
damaging to the economy.
The Fed has been raising rates to reduce the boost that monetary policy
gives to the economy, which is growing faster than what central bank
policymakers view as a sustainable rate.
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Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell arrives at his news
conference after a Federal Open Market Committee meeting in
Washington, U.S., December 19, 2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
There are worries, however, that the economy could enter choppy
waters next year as the fiscal boost from the Trump administration's
spending and $1.5 trillion tax cut package fades and the global
economy slows.
"I think that markets were looking for more in terms of the pause,"
said Jamie Cox, managing partner at Harris Financial Group in
Richmond, Virginia.
"It's not as dovish as expected, but I do believe the Fed will
ultimately back off even further as we move into the new year."
The benchmark S&P 500 index <.SPX> tumbled to a 15-month low,
extending a streak of volatility that has dogged the market since
late September. The index is down nearly 15 percent from its record
high.
Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields <US10YT=RR> fell as low as 2.75
percent, the lowest since April 4.
ECONOMIC PROJECTIONS
Fed policymakers' median forecast puts the federal funds rate at 3.1
percent at the end of 2020 and 2021, according to the projections.
That would leave borrowing costs just above policymakers' newly
downgraded median view of a 2.8 percent neutral rate that neither
brakes nor boosts a healthy economy, but still within the 2.5
percent to 3.5 percent range of Fed estimates for that rate.
Powell parried three questions about whether the Fed intended to
restrict the economy with its rate policy, but gave little away.
"There would be circumstances in which it would be appropriate for
us to go past neutral, and there would be circumstances in which it
would be wholly inappropriate to do so."
Gross domestic product is forecast to grow 2.3 percent next year and
2.0 percent in 2020, slightly weaker than the Fed previously
anticipated. The unemployment rate, currently at a 49-year low of
3.7 percent, is expected to fall to 3.5 percent next year and rise
slightly in 2020 and 2021.
Inflation, which hit the central bank's 2 percent target this year,
is expected to be 1.9 percent next year, a bit lower than the 2.0
percent forecast three months ago.
There were no dissents in the Fed's policy decision.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir and Howard Schneider; Additional reporting
by Lewis Krauskopf in New York; Editing by Paul Simao and Dan Burns)
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