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  • FOMC January Meeting: Majority of Participants Project Target Interest Rate Hike At Least Two Years Off

    It looks as though interest rates will remain low for the next two years. At their January meeting, members of the Federal Open Market Committee not only kept the target federal funds rate between 0 and 1/4 percent, they, as a group, projected the next rate increase would likely not come until 2014 at the earliest. They also set the inflation target at 2%. Here is a look at the Fed's projections for GDP and unemployment: At his press conference following the meeting, Ben Bernanke noted that the Fed needs to remain open to measures to "provide further stimulus" if the pace of recovery slows: Read the FOMC January statement here .
  • Low Expectations and No Monetary Policy Changes from the FOMC November Meeting

    The Federal Open Market Committee has wrapped up its two day November meeting, and it appears there are no significant changes to monetary policy coming in the near future. The Fed will keep the federal funds target rate at 0 to 1/4 percent, as the committee anticipates recovery will continue at a slow pace. From the release: The Committee continues to expect a moderate pace of economic growth over coming quarters and consequently anticipates that the unemployment rate will decline only gradually toward levels that the Committee judges to be consistent with its dual mandate. Moreover, there are significant downside risks to the economic outlook, including strains in global financial markets. The Committee also anticipates that inflation will settle, over coming quarters, at levels at or below those consistent with the Committee's dual mandate as the effects of past energy and other commodity price increases dissipate further. Here's a look at the Fed's current projections for GDP and jobs: Read the full release here , and watch Fed Chair Ben Bernanke's press conference from the FOMC meeting below:
  • SF Fed Economic Letter: Business Cycle Indicators Forecast Low Growth in 2011

    In the latest Economic Letter from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco , David Lang and Kevin J. Lansing examine recent forecasts produced by business cycle indicators from the Feder Reserve banks of Philadelphia and Chicago. The authors note that these forecasts suggest unemployment will not abate in the coming year. Rather, based on the traditional relationship between GDP and jobs, the unemployment rate will likely go up slightly. The monthly value of the CFNAI or ADS index at the end of the quarter provides a gauge of recent economic data, whereas the change from the previous quarter indicates whether the data are improving or deteriorating. Given that financial markets are forward looking, the quarterly changes in stock prices and long-term Treasury yields measure the degree to which recent data may have shifted investor expectations about the future. All these variables are statistically significant in helping explain real GDP growth two to four quarters ahead. The two-quarter-ahead forecasting models explain about 50% of the variance of real GDP growth since 1972, while the four-quarter-ahead models explain about 30% of the variance. Figure 3 plots forecasts from the two-quarter-ahead models versus the two-quarter moving average of real GDP growth from 2007 to 2010. Both forecasts track the actual data fairly well through the first half of 2010, but with a lag, which is typical when current and past data are used to make predictions about the future. For the second half of 2010, the CFNAI model predicts an average growth rate of 1.0%, while the ADS model predicts an average growth rate of 1.9%. The four-quarter-ahead CFNAI model predicts average growth rates through the first half of 2011 of 1.6% and the four-quarter-ahead ADS model predicts 2.2%. By contrast, the most-recent Blue Chip consensus forecast is for 2% growth in the second half of 2010 and 2.3% through the first half of 2011. Lang and Lansing note that the "conventional wisdom" that recessions are followed by rapid recoveries clearly does not apply to this recession, and that the "Chicago and Philadelphia Fed business cycle indicators predict that real GDP growth through the first half of 2011 will remain at or below potential." As a result, they are projecting unemployment to rise another 0.5% in 2011. Read the full article here .
  • WSJ August Forecast: Most Economists Surveyed Say the Recession Has Ended

    The Wall Street Journal 's August forecasting survey shows most of the participating economists feel the economy stabilizing: After months of uncertainty, economists are finally seeing a break in the clouds. Forecasts were revised upward for every period, with 27 economists saying the recession had ended and 11 seeing a trough this month or next. Gross domestic product in the third quarter is now expected to show 2.4% growth at a seasonally adjusted annual rate amid signs of life in the manufacturing sector, partly spurred by inventory adjustments and strong demand for the "cash for clunkers" car-rebate program. Here's what the Journal's GDP forecasting trend looks like: This month the Journal asked economists to weigh in on Ben Bernanke. The Fed Chair has 6 months left in his current term, and the economists surveyed give him a 71% chance of being reappointed. Wall Street Journal news editor Phil Izzo discusses econiomists' views on Bernanke and the survey with Kelly Evans : Click here for full coverage of the survey, and here for the Journal's always useful interactive survey charts and graphs.