Tuesday, September 22, 2009

FED MAY LEAVE RATE UNCHANGED

       Federal Reserve policy-makers may formally acknowledge an economic recovery is underway but will make few changes to their vast stimulus effort until they see a sustainable expansion, analysts say.
       A two-day meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee opening tomorrow is widely expected to leave unchanged the central bank's near-zero interest rate policy while making only minor changes to the array of liquidity programmes to keep credit flowing.
       Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said last Tuesday the US recession "is very likely over" but that the economy remains weak due to the economy remains weak due to difficult credit conditions and high unemployment.
       John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics, said the Fed cannot even think about hiking rates with the current degree of economic slack and joblessness.
       "With so much slack in the economy, the Fed is not going to be inclined to raise rates anytime soon," Ryding said. "At the same time [year-over-year] inflation rates are still in negative territory rates are still in negative territory. They can be relieved the recovery is more clearly here and acknowledge it but there is no reason for the Fed to do anything different."
       With the federal funds are seemingly frozen at zero to 0.25 per ent, the central bank's only policy option revolves around its various liquidity programs implemented since last year's credit freeze.
       The Fed last month indicated it would conclude its US$300-billion (Bt10 trillion) programme to purchase Treasury bonds, part of a programme to bring down interest rates which some call "Quantitative Easing".
       It must decide, however, on whether to extend into 2010 a trilion-dollar programme to purchase mortgage securities, which is aimed at keeping credit flowing to the still-weak housing market.
       Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James and Associates, said the Fed may make some modest changes in these special programmes at it positions itself for a strengthening economy.
       "They are in no hurry to start raising short-term interest rates but they do have to keep an eye on the end game," he said.
       The Fed has already indicated it has scaled back its commercial paper guarantee programme and currency swaps with other central banks because credit markets are operating more normally.
       US gross domestic product (GDP), the broadest measure of the economy's activity, fell at an annualised rate of 1.0 per cent in the second quarter, after a 6.4-per-cent plunge in the January - March period.
       But unemployment rose in August to a 26-year high of 9.7 per cent and there is a growing fear joblessness may hit 10 per cent before a full recovery takes root.
       Dean Maki, economist at Barclays Capital, said the job of the Fed and other central banks will become more complicated as the recovery progresses. "Central banks around the world slashed interest rates and together with fiscal policy stimulus in many countries, these actions helped the global economy escape recession," he said.
       "With this part of the mission accomplished, we think the focus of central banks will be shifting, but at different speeds."
       Maki argues that the US recovery is gaining more steam than most analysts expect and now calls for a robust 5.0 per cent growth pace by the first quarter of 2010.
       Based on historical date, Maki said that "the strength of a recovery has been proportional to the depth of the recession" and added: "By that standard, our peak quarter of 5.0 per cent growth can actually be thought of as conservative."
       Maki said the Fed in the coming week will likely trim its debt purchases to acknowledge the normalisation of credit markets, but will maintain ultra-low rates to keep the recovery on track for another year.

       "The Fed in the coming week "will likely trim its debt purchases to acknowledge the normalisation of credit markets, but will maintain ultra-low rates to keep the recovery on track for another year".

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