Excerpt from: Forex News
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| December 17, 2009 | | Ben Bernanke points out that the Fed is laying the groundwork for withdrawal from economic stimulus | Yesterday, the Federal Reserve concluded its two-day meeting. As expected, the interest rate remained the same. However, the Fed appears to be turning a corner in its view of the economy. Yesterday's statement was the most upbeat of the year, with the Fed very nearly expressing outright optimism. Additionally, Ben Bernanke indicated that the Fed is laying the groundwork to begin withdrawing from economic stimulus efforts relatively soon.
GFT's Kathy Lien summarizes some of the highlights of yesterday's Fed statement in FX360:
The central bank believes that the deterioration in the labor
market is abating and that companies have shifted from laying off staff
to becoming simply reluctant to hire. They also said that income growth
is modest, which is an improvement from their previous assessment that
income growth was sluggish. Last month, the Fed only said that
the Committee will gradually slow the pace of its purchases of both
agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities and anticipates that
these transactions will be executed by the end of the first quarter of
2010.
Clearly, the Fed believes that things are looking better than they have for quite some time. While much of the better economic positioning has more to do with a slowdown in negative effects than marked improvement, things are still in train for economic recovery.
The Fed's statement was a clue that interest rate hikes might be seen sooner in 2010 than some would like, and also a signal to dollar bulls that now is a good time to rally on economic recovery and fundamentals.
| Topic Tags: Ben Bernanke, economic stimulus, economy, employment, Federal Reserve, FX360, GFT, interest rate, Kathy Lien, U.S. dollar | |
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