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Fed ends zero-rate era and signals four quarter-point rises

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Photograph by Richard Drew/APWait is over: Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen’s Washington news conference is shown on a screen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, yesterday. Shares moved higher on the news that the Fed has lifted its key rate by a quarter-point to a range of 0.25 per cent to 0.5 per cent

WASHINGTON (Bloomberg) — The Federal Reserve raised interest rates yesterday for the first time in almost a decade in a widely telegraphed move while signalling that the pace of subsequent increases will be “gradual” and in line with previous projections.

The Federal Open Market Committee unanimously voted to set the new target range for the federal funds rate at 0.25 per cent to 0.5 per cent, up from zero to 0.25 per cent. Policymakers separately forecast an appropriate rate of 1.375 per cent at the end of 2016, the same as September, implying four quarter-point increases in the target range next year, based on the median number from 17 officials.

“The committee judges that there has been considerable improvement in labour market conditions this year, and it is reasonably confident that inflation will rise, over the medium term, to its 2 per cent objective,” the FOMC said in a statement yesterday following a two-day meeting in Washington. The Fed said it raised rates “given the economic outlook, and recognising the time it takes for policy actions to affect future economic outcomes.”

The increase draws to a close an unprecedented period of record-low rates that were part of extraordinary and controversial Fed policies designed to stimulate the US economy in the wake of the most devastating financial crisis since the Great Depression. The FOMC lowered its benchmark rate to near zero in December 2008, three months after the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers Holdings and 10 months before unemployment in the US peaked at 10 per cent.

While the vote was unanimous, the rate forecasts show that two officials among the full group of voters and non-voters saw no rate increases as appropriate in 2015, without identifying them.

“The committee expects that economic conditions will evolve in a manner that will warrant only gradual increases in the federal funds rate,” the FOMC said. “The actual path of the federal funds rate will depend on the economic outlook as informed by incoming data.”

The FOMC said it expects to maintain the size of its balance sheet “until normalisation of the level of the federal funds rate is well under way.”

The quarter-point increase in the target fed funds rate, the overnight interbank lending rate that influences other borrowing costs in the economy, was forecast by 102 of 105 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.

The Fed gave a largely positive assessment of the US economy, saying that expansion continued at a “moderate pace” and that a “range” of job-market indicators “confirms that underutilisation of labour resources has diminished appreciably since early this year.”

The central bank also said that the risks to the outlook for economic activity and the labour market are now “balanced,” changing from a previous reference to being “nearly balanced.”

The Fed said monetary policy is still “accommodative after this increase, thereby supporting further improvement in labour market conditions and a return to 2 per cent inflation.”

The central bank acknowledged the state of low inflation, saying that it plans to “carefully monitor actual and expected progress toward” its 2 per cent.

As part of the decision, the Fed increased the interest it pays on overnight reverse repos to 0.25 per cent from 0.05 per cent to put a floor at the lower end of the range. It also raised the interest it pays on excess reserves held at the Fed to 0.5 per cent from 0.25 per cent to mark the upper end of the range.

In a related move, the Fed’s Board of Governors unanimously voted to raise the discount rate, which covers direct loans to banks, by a quarter point to 1 per cent.

News arrives: a screen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shows the rate decision of the Federal Reserve yesterday. The Fed’s move to lift its key rate by a quarter-point to a range of 0.25 per cent to 0.5 per cent ends an extraordinary seven-year period of near-zero rates that began at the depths of the 2008 financial crisis