The Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised its benchmark short-term interest rate by a quarter point, the sixth such increase in three years. The hike put the rate at a range of 1.5 percent to 1.75 percent, the highest in a decade. The move came at the end of the first two-day policy meeting under the Fed's new chairman, Jerome Powell. The central bank's leaders forecast two more rate hikes this year and three in 2019, signaling a cautious but toughening approach to slowly unwinding the measures they took to stimulate the economy during the financial crisis. Powell, who succeeded Janet Yellen last month, said the Fed is trying to raise rates enough to keep the strengthening economy from overheating, without moving too fast. "We're trying to take that middle ground," he said. [Bloomberg, The New York Times] |
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