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Federal Reserve increases interest rates by 0.5 points


BREAKING NEWS: Federal Reserve increases interest rates by HALF a point: Central Bank confirms smaller hike with inflation finally showing signs of slowing and after four straight 0.75-point rises

  • Wednesday’s increase was the seventh this year and set rates at 4.25 to 4.5 percent, the highest in 15 years 
  • Jerome Powell, who is leading Fed on tight line between tamping down inflation and triggering a recession, promised there would be ‘some pain’ for Americans

The Federal Reserve rose its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point on Wednesday, one day after inflation figures showed prices up 7.1 percent year-over-year. 

The hike was smaller than the Fed’s last four straight jumbo 0.75 percent hikes. Wednesday’s increase was the seventh this year and set rates at 4.25 to 4.5 percent, the highest in 15 years – further increasing borrowing costs for businesses and consumers. 

Chair Jerome Powell, who is leading the central bank on a tight line between tamping down inflation and triggering a recession, promised there would be ‘some pain’ for Americans as the Fed tried to cool off the market. 

The Labor Department’s Tuesday report on the consumer price index (CPI) showed inflation still remains uncomfortably high, but has fallen well below its recent peak of 9.1 percent in June.

Federal Reserve increases interest rates by 0.5 points

Fed Chair Jerome Powell has said he is tracking price trends in three different categories to best understand the likely path of inflation: Goods, housing, and services

November’s 7.1 percent annual inflation rate was lower than economists had expected, and marked the lowest 12-month increase since December 2021.

At the same time, the Fed is expected to signal that it is planning more rate hikes next year than it previously forecast to try to conquer the worst inflation bout in four decades. And most economists think Chair Jerome Powell will stress that the Fed will likely keep its benchmark rate at its high point through next year, even after the hikes have ended.

The new CPI report showed that core inflation, excluding volatile food and energy prices, increased at a 6 percent annual rate last month, down from September’s peak of 6.7 percent.

Grocery prices remain especially elevated, with food at home rising 12 percent in November from one year ago. Rent also rose uncomfortably fast, jumping 7.9 percent on the year in the new report.

But real-time measures of apartment rents and home prices are starting to drop after soaring at the height of the pandemic, changes that will not appear in the CPI report until next year.

Used car prices, which had skyrocketed 45 percent in June 2021 compared with a year earlier, have fallen for most of this year. In November, their year-over-year prices actually declined 3.3 percent.

Other goods, particularly electronics, showed strong signs of moderating, with television prices down 17 percent from last year, and smartphones dropping 23 percent.

Consumers also got some relief in the form of falling gas prices, which dropped 3.6 percent from October to November.

On Monday, the national average price of gas was $3.26, down 52 cents from last month and six cents less than a year ago, according to AAA.

Inflation in the US continues to moderate, rising at an annual rate of 7.1 percent in November in the fifth-straight month of declines

Inflation still remains uncomfortably high, but has fallen well below its recent peak of 9.1 percent in June

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