Fed again pledges to hold rates at record-lows
By JEANNINE AVERSA
WASHINGTON (AP) - With the recession apparently over, the
Federal Reserve on Wednesday held a key interest rate at a record
low and again pledged to keep it there for an ``extended period''
to foster the fragile economic recovery.
The Fed said economic activity has ``continued to pick up'' and
that the housing market also has grown stronger, a key ingredient
to a sustained recovery.
But Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues warned that
rising joblessness and hard-to-get-credit for many people and
companies could restrain the rebound in the months ahead.
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Against that backdrop, the Fed kept the target range for its
bank lending rate at zero to 0.25 percent. And it made no major
changes to a program to help drive down mortgage rates.
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.
Still, some credit card rates have risen over the last several
months. Part of that reflects rate bump-ups by lenders in response
to escalating defaults on credit card loans. Lenders also pushed
through increases before a new law clamping down on sudden rate
hikes for credit card customers takes effect early next year.
The average rate nationwide on a variable-rate credit card is
11.5 percent, according to Bankrate.com. Lenders charge more and
credit card customers pay rates higher than the prime because the
debt they run up is more risky.
In normal times, the Fed controls only short-term rates. But
after the financial crisis erupted the Fed began buying longer-term
Treasuries, keeping those rates lower than they'd otherwise be.
This is good news for borrowers with auto loans, some student
loans, 15- and 30-year fixed-rate mortgages and some
adjustable-rate mortgages. But it hurts savers and people dependent
on fixed incomes who would normally be enjoying higher yields.
The Fed stuck with its pledge to keep rates at ``exceptionally
low'' levels for ``an extended period.'' Many economists predict
that means the Fed will leave rates where they are into part of
next year to help give the recovery traction.
The central bank hopes that low rates will entice American
consumers and businesses to boost spending, which would give the
recovery more traction.
The Fed has now entered into a new phase - managing the recovery
rather than fighting the worst recession and financial crisis to
hit the country since the Great Depression.
At some point when the recovery is more firmly rooted, the Fed
is likely to start signaling that higher rates are coming. Most
analysts don't think the Fed would begin to boost rates until the
spring or the summer. One of the clues about eventually rate hikes
would be the Fed changing or dropping its pledge to hold rates at
super-low levels for an ``extended period.''
Though it didn't change a program to help drive down mortgage
rates, the central bank did say it will trim its purchases of debt
from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to $175 billion, from $200 billion,
because the supply of that debt has declined.
At its previous meeting in late September, the Fed agreed to
slow 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 the mortgage securities.
Its efforts to lower mortgage rates are paying off. Rates on
30-year loans averaged 5.03 percent, Freddie Mac reported last
week, down from 6.46 percent last year.
Even though the Fed will slow its purchases of mortgage
securities, rates for home loans should remain low - in the 5
percent range- as long as the purchases continue, analysts say.
Another key program to drive down a range of interest rates on
loans taken out by consumers and small businesses ended in October.
The Fed at its August meeting had decided to slow down that effort
and wrap up purchases of $300 billion worth of government debt, a
month later than previously scheduled.
11/04/09 15:22
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