Unwise' to wait too
long to hike interest rates:
Janet Yellen
Waiting too long to raise interest rates would be "unwise" as economic growth continues and inflation rises, Fed Chair Janet Yellen told
Congress on Tuesday.
Waiting too long to raise interest rates would be "unwise" as economic
growth continues and inflation rises, Fed Chair Janet Yellen told
Congress on Tuesday.
Repeating caution that she and other central bank officials have issued
in recent months, Yellen said that even though the Fed expects to hike
gradually and to keep policy accommodative, getting rates back to normal
levels is important and hikes will be considered ahead.
Market reaction was prompt, with government bond yields jumping on
sentiment that Yellen was teeing up next month's Fed meeting as possible
for a rate hike.
"By leaving March rate hike options open, Chair Yellen is sticking with
her playbook with repeated reminders that every meeting is in fact a
live meeting," said Mark Hamrick, senior economic analyst at
Bankrate.com.
The Fed kept its target overnight lending rate near zero for seven years
and raised just twice since — in December 2015 and again a year later.
The funds rate is currently targeted in the 0.5 percent to 0.75 percent
range.
Traders do not expect the policymaking Federal Open Market Committee to
hike at the March session. However, Yellen did say that increases would
be evaluated "at upcoming meetings."
"Waiting too long to remove accommodation would be unwise, potentially
requiring the FOMC to eventually raise rates rapidly, which could risk
disrupting financial markets and pushing the economy into recession,"
Yellen said, according to prepared remarks of her semiannual report on
monetary policy to the Senate.
When hiking at the December 2016 meeting, FOMC members indicated that
three more increases are likely in 2017. Traders, though, are pricing in
just two moves — in June and December. The likelihood for a March move
is at just 18 percent, according to the CME.
"At our upcoming meetings, the Committee will evaluate whether
employment and inflation are continuing to evolve in line with these
expectations, in which case a further adjustment of the federal funds
rate would likely be appropriate," Yellen said.
Yellen deemed growth "moderate" amid a strengthening job market and inflation gradually moving up the Fed's 2 percent target. She noted that
business sentiment is improving but manufacturing is getting hit with a
rising U.S. dollar.
Fiscal policy also presents an uncertainty, she said, as President
Donald Trump is working with congressional Republicans to roll back tax
rates for individuals and corporations and to cut regulations.
Yellen urged lawmakers to focus on long-term growth and productivity and
to put the burgeoning US debt load on a "sustainable trajectory." The
national debt currently sits at USD 19.2 trillion, of which the public
is responsible for USD 14.4 trillion.
"Of course, it is too early to know what policy changes will be put in
place or how their economic effects will unfold," she said. "While it is
not my intention to opine on specific tax or spending proposals, I
would point to the importance of improving the pace of longer-run economic growth and raising American living standards with policies
aimed at improving productivity."
The remarks touched little on how the Fed plans to unwind its mammoth
USD 4.5 trillion balance sheet, a topic of increasing concern on Wall
Street. She did indicate that the Fed plans to continue reinvesting
proceeds from the government debt it holds.
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