The Federal Reserve kept its streak alive on Wednesday, assessing a .25% hike on its benchmark interest rate, a move marking the 10th straight increase over the past year or so.
The decision by the Fed’s Open Market Committee brings the target range for the federal funds rate to 5.0% — 5.25%. In its announcement of the rate adjustment, the Fed said it believes the U.S. banking system is “sound and resilient” but also noted tighter credit conditions for households and businesses “are likely to weigh on economic activity, hiring and inflation” in the coming months.
The rate increase comes in the wake of dissonant economic signals, including ongoing banking volatility that’s been exacerbated by increasing interest rates, marked just days ago when San Francisco-based First Republic Bank became the third major bank failure in the last two months, a fresh U.S. GDP report that found the overall U.S. economy in a slowdown, a still very hot U.S. jobs market that’s driving wage increases and consumer inflation that’s running well above the Fed’s target rate of 2%.
The Federal Reserve’s 10 consecutive rate hikes have been its primary weapon in an ongoing battle against the elevated prices of consumer goods and services and represents the monetary body’s most aggressive series of increases in decades.
The rate hikes aim to raise the cost of debt for businesses and consumers which should, theoretically, reduce the amount of spending and overall economic activity, a shift in dynamics that typically brings inflation rates down.
After hitting a high of 9.1% in June 2022, U.S. inflation marked nine straight months of declines in March with the overall rate coming in at 5.0% over the same time last year and down from 6.0% in February, according to the latest federal reporting.
While overall annual inflation dropped a full percentage point in March, core inflation, a metric that strips out volatile food and energy costs and a data point closely watched by the Federal Reserve, saw a 0.4% increase from February and at 5.6% is now outstripping headline inflation for the first time since early 2021.
Some regions of the U.S. saw inflation drop as low as 3.6% in March. But the Mountain West states, which include Utah, continue to hold down the unenviable top spot when it comes to price hikes on goods and services and saw a 6% annual rate in March.
This story will be updated.
"sound" - Google News
May 04, 2023 at 01:28AM
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Fed hikes rates again, believe U.S. banking sector is 'sound' - Deseret News
"sound" - Google News
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