The
Federal Reserve is raising a key interest rate for the third time this
year, signaling continued confidence in a U.S. economy that's moving
into its ninth year of expansion.
The target federal funds rate —
what banks charge each other for loans — has been raised to the range
of 1.25 to 1.5 percent, or a hike of one-quarter of a percentage point.
It's the fifth rate increase during Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen's
tenure. Yellen is stepping down in January, to be replaced by Jerome
Powell.
The Federal Reserve Open Markets Committee, the central
bank's rate-setting body, factored in the expected effects of the tax
cut package that is in its final stages in Congress.
"We have
seen a significant increase in the stock market, and at least some
portion of that likely reflected expected tax changes," Yellen told
reporters on Wednesday. While saying it would be "very difficult" to
achieve the 4 percent growth President Donald Trump has promised, she
touted strong consumer spending and confidence as factors that would
keep the economy growing at a "moderate" pace in future years. The Fed
expects GDP to grow at 2.5 percent next year, slowing down to 2 percent in 2020.
Asked
about the recent run-up in bitcoin prices, Yellen largely demurred,
saying the Fed does not have a role in overseeing so-called
cryptocurrencies.
"[Bitcoin] is not a stable store of value and it
does not constitute legal tender," she said. "It is a highly
speculative asset."
Nonetheless, the Fed is studying the
possibility of creating its own digital currency, she later said. "While
we're looking at research on this topic, there are, to my mind, limited
benefits to introducing it, a limited need for it and substantial
concerns," Yellen said.
The Federal Open Markets Committee, the Fed's rate-setting body, said in
a statement that it expected that "economic activity will expand at a
moderate pace and labor market conditions will remain strong." Two
members of the committee, however, had voted to keep rates steady:
Charles Evans, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, and
Neel Kashkari, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.
Markets
had anticipated the increase given the overall strength of the economy.
The unemployment rate has slipped to a 17-year low of 4.1 percent,
although wages haven't been rising much and inflation still lags the
Fed's target.
"For a number of years now, inflation has been
running under 2 percent. I consider it a priority that inflation doesn't
undershoot its objective," Yellen said. However, most of the committee
members believe that the rate is held down by temporary factors, she
said.
She also pushed back on notions that stocks were overvalued,
saying economists "are not great at knowing what appropriate valuations
are."
"The fact that those valuations are high doesn't mean
they are necessarily overvalued. We are in a low-interest-rate
environment… that's a factor that support higher valuations," she said.
Indeed, if the Fed keeps interest rates low, as it seems likely to for
the near future, those prices will likely persist.
"If you're in
an environment where growth can continue, then corporations can continue
to generate additional earnings and justify those prices," said Jim
Barnes, director of fixed income at Bryn Mawr Trust.
Some
economists are skeptical, calling the Fed's prediction of low
unemployment and modest growth Pollyannish. "This looks hopelessly
unrealistic to us," Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon
Macroeconomics, said in a note. "[T]he Fed forecasts an endless
expansion, with minimal inflation pressure, despite unemployment well
below their Nairu estimate - unchanged at 4.6% - forever and interest
rates peaking at 3.1%. We wish Jay Powell the best of luck; he's going
to need it."
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