Fed likely to keep key interest rate at record low
By JEANNINE AVERSA
WASHINGTON (AP) - Faced with lurking dangers to the budding
recovery, Federal Reserve policymakers are sure to leave a key
interest rate at a record low to entice Americans to spend more and
help the economic turnaround gain traction.
The economy started to grow again last quarter for the first
time in more than a year, although there are uncertainties about
the strength and staying power of the recovery, especially after
government supports are removed.
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues resumed meeting
Wednesday morning and are likely to note the country's economic and
financial improvements when they wrap up their two-day session in
the afternoon. But they'll also warn that rising joblessness and
hard-to-get-credit for many people and companies will restrain the
rebound in the months ahead. Troubles in the commercial real estate
market, where soured loans are contributing to bank failures, also
remain a concern.
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At its last meeting in late September, the Fed opted to stretch
out into early next year a key program aimed at forcing down
mortgage rates and providing support to the housing market. The
central bank isn't expected to veer from that course Wednesday.
Wanting to nurture the recovery, the Fed is widely expected to
keep the target range for its bank lending rate at zero to 0.25
percent. If it does, commercial banks' prime lending rate, used to
peg rates on home equity loans, certain credit cards and other
consumer loans, will stay at about 3.25 percent, the lowest in
decades.
``I don't think there is confidence at this point that the
economy is firing on all cylinders by itself,'' said Bill Cheney,
chief economist at John Hancock Financial Services. ``It is not
ready to be weaned off the extra fiscal and monetary support.''
Against that backdrop, many economists predict the Fed will
maintain a pledge to keep rates ``exceptionally low'' for an
``extended period.'' The hope is that super-low rates will spur
consumers and businesses to spend more, supporting the recovery.
The Fed has leeway to do this because inflation has been low,
economists said.
``The central bankers in the U.S. and Europe are considering the
exit strategies,'' said Sung Won Sohn, economist at California
State University's Smith School of Business. ``Even the thought of
an exit strategy could spook the financial markets and raise the
bond and mortgage yields, hurting the economy.''
Still, there are differences of opinion within the Fed about
when it might need to start boosting rates - and how aggressively -
to fend off inflation.
Inflation hawks, including the presidents of the Fed banks in
Dallas, Philadelphia and Richmond, worry more about super-low
borrowing costs and other special supports driving prices higher.
But waiting too long could touch off inflation.
If the recovery takes hold, many analysts think the Fed could
start to raise rates in the spring or summer. Bernanke and other
Fed officials would try to prepare investors, businesses and
ordinary Americans of a shift in stance well in advance of any
upcoming shift in stance. One clue would come when the Fed opts to
drop its ``extended period'' language, analysts said.
Whenever the Fed starts to boost rates, unemployment likely will
still be high, analysts said. The worst recession since the 1930s
caused companies to slash jobs and other costs to survive. They
won't ramp up hiring until they are confident the recovery is
entrenched.
The unemployment rate - now at a 26-year high of 9.8 percent -
is expected to keep rising, Bernanke and other Fed officials have
said. Economists predict it will hit 9.9 percent when the
government releases the latest snapshot on employment conditions on
Friday. It could rise as high as 10.5 percent around the middle of
next year before declining gradually, analysts said.
Beyond rates, Fed officials in September were conflicted over
whether to expand or cut back a program intended to drive down
mortgage rates and prop up the housing market, according to minutes
of the closed-door deliberations.
They ultimately agreed to slow down the pace of a $1.25 trillion
program to buy mortgage securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
wrapping up the purchases by the end of March instead of at
year-end. So far, the Fed has bought $776 billion of mortgage
securities.
The central bank was not divided over another part of program to
buy $200 billion worth of Fannie and Freddie debt. It has bought
$141.6 billion so far.
The Fed's efforts have helped lower mortgage rates. Rates on
30-year loans averaged 5.03 percent, Freddie Mac reported last
week, down from 6.46 percent last year.
Meanwhile, the Fed is moving quickly on plans to police banks'
pay policies to discourage reckless gambles by executives, traders,
loan officers and other employees.
The nation's top 28 banks face a Feb. 1 deadline for submitting
employee compensation plans to the Fed. The Fed isn't setting
compensation, but it will have the power to reject pay plans - and
call for changes in them.
The Fed also will be encouraging - though not requiring - banks
to revise this year's pay plans if they are significantly out of
step with principles the Fed has recently proposed to discourage
excessive risk taking.
Elsewhere, the British government on Tuesday moved to break up
two major banks - Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Group - that
have been bailed out by taxpayers. At the same time, the government
injected more public cash into them.
11/04/09 09:08
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