Yuma Sun

Fed raises rates for 3rd time this year

-

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve signaled its confidence Wednesday in the U.S. economy by raising a key interest rate for a third time this year, forecastin­g another rate hike before year’s end and predicting that it will continue to tighten credit into 2020 to manage growth and inflation.

The Fed lifted its shortterm rate — a benchmark for many consumer and business loans — by a modest quarter-point to a range of 2 percent to 2.25 percent. It was its eighth hike since late 2015. The central bank also stuck with a forecast for more rate hikes in 2019.

In a statement after its meeting, the Fed dropped phrasing it had long used that characteri­zed its policy as “accommodat­ive” — that is, favoring low rates. The Fed had used variations of that pledge in the seven years that it kept its key rate at a record low near zero and over the past nearly three years in which it’s tightened credit.

By removing that language, the Fed may be signaling its resolve to keep raising rates. In a news conference after its meeting, though, Chairman Jerome Powell said the removal of the “accommodat­ive” language did not amount to a policy change.

“Our economy is strong,” Powell declared at the start of his news conference. “Growth is running at a healthy clip, unemployme­nt is low. The number of people working is rising steadily, and wages are up. Inflation is low and stable, all of these are very good signs.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States