Federal Reserve votes to end bond-buying stimulus program
Reporting from Washington — Federal Reserve policymakers voted Wednesday to end the central bank’s controversial bond-buying stimulus program, determining the economy is strong enough to remove the unprecedented support.
The Fed also kept its benchmark short-term interest rate near 0%, where it has been since late 2008.
Both moves were expected as the policymaking Federal Open Market Committee ended a two-day meeting.
Still, with Middle East tensions and the Ebola outbreak in West Africa triggering financial market turmoil and dropping oil prices, there was speculation the Fed might continue the stimulus program.
But Fed Chairwoman Janet L. Yellen and other central bank policymakers held to earlier comments that they planned to end the program this month.
“The Committee judges that there has been a substantial improvement in the outlook for the labor market since the inception of its current asset purchase program,†according to a Fed statement.
The economy “is expanding at a moderate pace†and inflation continues to run below the Fed’s annual target of 2%, the statement said.
Policymakers also reiterated that they planned to keep the central bank’s interest rate near 0% for “a considerable time†following the end of the bond-buying program. Analysts expect the first interest rate hike to come around the middle of next year.
The bond-buying program, the third round of so-called quantitative easing begun in late 2008, involved the purchase of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities to bring down long-term interest rates and boost growth.
The Fed began the latest round in September 2012, when the unemployment rate was 8.1%, in hopes of improving the job market.
Since then, unemployment has dropped sharply and was down to 5.9% in September, the lowest level since mid-2008.
The Fed purchased $85 billion in bonds a month through December, when policymakers voted to start slowly reducing the purchases.
In September, the Fed voted to reduce its monthly purchases to $15 billion a month and Yellen said policymakers would vote to end it this month if the economy continued to improve as forecast.
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