The Federal Reserve left interest rates  unchanged on Wednesday but said near-term risks to  the U.S. economic outlook had diminished, opening  the door to a resumption of monetary policy  tightening this year. The U.S. central bank said the economy had  expanded at a moderate rate and job gains were  strong in June. It added that household spending  also had been “growing strongly,” and  pointed to an increase in labor utilization.    While Fed policymakers said they continued to  closely monitor inflation data and global economic  and financial developments, they indicated less  worry about possible shocks that could push the  economy off course.    “Near-term risks to the economic outlook  have diminished,” the Fed’s  policy-setting committee said in its statement  following a two-day meeting in which it left its  benchmark overnight interest rate in a range of  0.25 percent to 0.50 percent.    The Fed noted, however, that inflation  expectations were on balance little changed in  recent months, and gave no firm indication of  whether it would raise rates at its next policy  meeting in September.    Most Fed policymakers had urged caution in  raising rates until there was concrete progress in  moving inflation toward the central bank’s 2  percent target    “It’s a little bit more hawkish,  but not much,” said Walter Todd, chief  investment officer at Greenwood Capital Associates  in South Carolina.    The Fed’s preferred inflation rate  currently stands at 1.6 percent and has been below  target for more than four years.    U.S. Treasury prices pared gains after the  Fed’s decision, while the U.S. dollar  briefly strengthened against the euro and yen.  U.S. stocks extended declines before later  reversing course to trade largely flat in the  session.                       Federal funds futures implied traders still see  roughly even odds of a rate increase at the  Fed’s December meeting and about a 20  percent chance of such a move in September, a bit  lower than before the decision, according to  CME’s FedWatch Group.    The policy-setting committee will also meet at  the beginning of November, but a rate hike at that  time is generally seen as unlikely because it  would occur a week before the U.S. presidential  election.    A Reuters poll of economists suggested the Fed  is most likely to wait until December to raise  rates.    “There wasn’t any tip that the Fed  will raise rates in September,” said Mike  Materasso, co-chair of Franklin Templeton’s  fixed income policy committee in New York.  “A rate increase is warranted this year,  most likely at the end of the year, but a lot has  to do with a benign world arena.”                       Kansas City Fed President Esther George was the  only policymaker to dissent at this week’s  meeting. She has favored raising rates at three of  the last four meetings.    FOCUS ON DATA, YELLEN    The Fed has held steady on rates since  December, when it raised them for the first time  in nearly a decade and signaled another four rate  increases were in the offing for 2016.    That was scaled back to two hikes this year  after central bank policymakers issued new  projections in which they also lowered their  longer-term growth estimates for the U.S. economy.                         A global economic slowdown, financial market  volatility and uncertainty over the impact of  Britain’s June vote to leave the European  Union have repeatedly forced the Fed to delay  another rate increase.    The U.S. economy, however, has suffered little  initial impact from the so-called  ‘Brexit’ vote. A string of  better-than-expected economic data recently as  well as an easing in financial conditions also  have calmed nerves.     Fed officials will now turn their attention to  this Friday’s first initial estimate of U.S.  gross domestic product for the second quarter,  which is expected to show a healthy rebound from  the previous quarter.    The economy likely expanded at a 2.3 percent  annualized rate during the second quarter,  according to the Atlanta Federal Reserve’s  latest forecast.    The closely-watched U.S. monthly employment  report will be issued on Aug. 5, followed three  weeks later by a speech from Fed Chair Janet  Yellen at the annual central banking conference in  Jackson Hole, Wyoming.    Fed policymakers have used the conference to  give major steers on central bank policy.     (Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir, Howard  Schneider and David Chance; Additional reporting  by Lewis Krauskopf in New York; Editing by Paul  Simao)
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Fed leaves rates unchanged, says risks to outlook reduced – Reuters
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