Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Yellen upbeat about growth in coming quarter - Los Angeles Times

Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet L. Yellen painted a mostly upbeat picture of the economy emerging from a weather-induced winter slowdown but gave no hints of when the central bank might start raising rock-bottom interest rates.

In Capitol Hill testimony Wednesday, Yellen confirmed that the Fed is on target to end its controversial bond-buying stimulus program this fall and defended the Fed's easy money policies against criticism that they've helped Wall Street at the expense of average Americans.

Still, Yellen warned that the jobs situation was "far from satisfactory" and that a recent slowdown in the housing market was worrisome.

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Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas), the committee's chairman, said he was pleased that the Fed was ending its bond-buying effort. Bu! t he expressed concern that Fed policymakers have indicated they plan to keep short-term rates low long after the bond purchases end.

Yellen would not be pinned down on exactly when the Fed might start raising its benchmark short-term rate.

She was careful not to repeat her March comments that rate hikes could begin as soon as six months after the end of the bond-buying program. That estimate, at her first news conference after taking over as Fed chief, roiled financial markets.

Yellen told Brady on Wednesday that "there is no mechanical formula or timetable."

Brady was frustrated, noting that when the latest round of bond-buying began in September 2012, Fed officials were targeting a reduction in the unemployment rate to 6.5%.

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"We need to develop a more nuanced approach to what's going on in the labor market," she said.

Some Republican! s questioned her about an opinion column in Wednesday's Wall S! treet Journal by Fed expert Allan H. Meltzer in which he asserted the central bank's low-interest rate policies have been a factor in "goosing the stock market" to record highs at the risk of inflation.

Yellen did not agree.

"I would hardly endorse the term 'goosing the stock market,'" she said.

Responding to criticism that the Fed's policies have exacerbated income inequality by helping Wall Street, Yellen said she and her colleagues have been trying to stimulate economic growth. A growing economy helps all Americans, she said.

"There have been benefits … in the policies we've pursued for Main Street as well as for those who hold equities in their portfolios," Yellen said.

She cited improvements in the housing market. The bond-buying efforts helped push mortgage rates to record lows, although the reduction in the stimulus program has led those rates to start rising.

Yellen said mortgage rates remained "quite low by historical standards! ," making housing affordable.

But she said a recent slowdown in the housing market was a potential risk to the recovery, along with "heightened geopolitical tensions" — an apparent reference to the Ukraine crisis.

"One cautionary note … is that readings on housing activity — a sector that has been recovering since 2011 — have remained disappointing so far this year and will bear watching," Yellen said.

jim.puzzanghera@latimes.com

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Source : http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-yellen-economy-20140508-story.html