Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Wednesday the US central bank expects to slow the pace of its bond purchases later this year and bring them to a halt around mid-2014, comments that weighed on stocks and pushed bond yields to a 15-month high. The Fed expects moderate growth to lead to continuing healing in the job market as headwinds facing the economy ease, Bernanke said.
He also said policymakers expect inflation to move back up toward their long-term 2 percent goal. "The committee currently anticipates that it will be appropriate to moderate the monthly pace of purchases later this year, and if the subsequent data remain broadly aligned with our current expectations for the economy, we will continue to reduce the pace of purchases in measured steps through the first half of next year, ending purchases around mid-year," Bernanke said.
He made the statement at a news conference on the Fed''s decision, announced earlier on Wednesday, to continue buying $85 billion in bonds per month given still-high unemployment. After a two-day meeting, the Fed''s policy-setting panel offered a more upbeat assessment of the risks facing the economy than they had after they last met in May. "The committee sees the downside risks to the outlook for the economy and the labour market as having diminished since the fall," it said.
US stocks fell sharply, the dollar rose and US bond prices fell, lifting the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note to levels not seen since March 2012, as traders saw Bernanke''s remarks and the policy panel''s statement as a clear step toward a reduction in the central bank''s bond buying.
Kansas City Fed President Esther George again dissented against the Fed''s expansion of its support for the economy, expressing concern it could fuel financial imbalances and hurt the central bank''s goal of keeping inflation contained. But in a surprise, St. Louis Fed chief James Bullard also dissented, arguing the Fed should signal more strongly its willingness to defend its 2 percent goal for inflation, although the statement did not indicate whether he pushed for stepping up the pace of bond purchases.
The Fed has held overnight interest rates near zero since December 2008 while more than tripling its balance sheet to around $3.3 trillion with its bond buying. In its current and third instalment of so-called quantitative easing, it is purchasing $40 billion in mortgage-backed securities and $45 billion in longer-term US government securities each month.
Economists expect rates to stay on hold until 2015, but the view in financial markets of the lift-off date had shifted forward since Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke fired up speculation last month that the central bank could soon curb its asset buying. The Fed repeated on Wednesday that it will not raise interest rates until unemployment hits 6.5 percent or lower, provided that the outlook for inflation stays under 2.5 percent. The jobless rate was 7.6 percent in May.
In his news conference, Bernanke made clear that threshold was merely for considering a rate hike, not a trigger for necessarily making one. In fresh quarterly projections, 14 of the 19 members of the Fed''s policy panel said they did not think it would be appropriate to raise rates until some time in 2015.