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US Fed pulls back on stimulus effort

International Desk |
Update: 2013-12-19 01:03:03
US Fed pulls back on stimulus effort

DHAKA: The US Federal Reserve has announced a slowdown in its effort to boost the US economy.

The central bank said it planned to scale back its $85bn (£51.8bn) a month bond buying programme by $10bn a month, reports BBC.

Stimulus of this kind is designed to lower interest rates and boost economic activity

The Fed`s governing committee cited stronger job growth as a reason for the decision to begin winding down its programme of bond buying.

The announcement followed a two-day meeting in Washington DC.

The Fed`s decision to begin to ease its extraordinary stimulus efforts also indicates that the central bank believes that the US economy has finally strengthened enough that it no longer needs as much support.

The $10bn reduction comes from two areas: the Fed will reduce its US Treasury purchases from $45bn to $40bn per month as well as its buying of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) from $40bn to $35bn per month.

In its forecast for the coming years, the Fed said the employment situation will improve faster than previously expected.

It said the unemployment rate will fall to 6.3% in 2014 from its current level of 7%.

This could set the pace for further reductions in the Fed`s stimulus efforts in the coming year.

In a press conference to discuss the Fed`s announcement, Chairman Ben Bernanke said: "If incoming data broadly support the committee`s support for employment we will likely reduce the pace of committee`s purchases in further steps at future meetings."

However, he also cautioned: "Continued progress is by no means certain. Adjustments will be deliberate and dependent on incoming information."

`Symbolic`

US markets cheered the news.

The Dow Jones surged to close up 292.71 points, or 1.84%. Both the Nasdaq and S&P 500 indexes were up over 1% as well.

That is partially because, while significant, the amount of the pullback in bond-buying was slightly less than expected.

"Ultimately this a very small amount - it`s symbolic rather than more substantive," Steve Wood, chief market strategist at Russell Investments, told the BBC.

"The takeaway from this is that while the Federal Reserve might be reducing the dosage of the antibiotic, they`re not going to be discharging the patient anytime soon."
Inflation woes

The Fed also said it remained committed to seeing prices rise before it would completely withdraw its stimulus.

The central bank sets a target of a 2% rise in prices annually.

Currently, inflation levels are below that threshold, with the most recent consumer price index data showing a 1.2% rise in prices overall and a 1.7% rise in core prices, which exclude volatile food and energy costs.

"Nothing that we did today was intended to reduce accommodation," Mr Bernanke said during the news conference.

"We are committed to doing what is necessary to getting inflation back to target."

BDST: 1200 HRS, DEC 19 , 2013
RS

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