Jornal GGN – O Federal Reserve – o Banco Central dos Estados Unidos – manteve inalterado seu programa de incentivo à economia norte-americana, segundo ata da reunião, divulgada nesta quarta-feira (19).
Ao mesmo tempo, a autoridade monetária norte-americana não deu pistas sobre quando poderá começar a reduzir a compra de títulos, no valor mensal de US$ 85 bilhões. “O comitê está mantendo sua atual política de reinvestir os pagamentos do principal de seus títulos de dívida, dos papéis de longo prazo lastreados em hipotecas e os vencimentos dos títulos de Tesouro. “Tomadas em conjunto, essas ações devem manter uma pressão descendente sobre as taxas de juros de longo prazo, apoiar os mercados de hipotecas e ajudar a tornar as condições financeiras mais acomodatícias”.
Segundo o comunicado divulgado, o colegiado afirma que a economia continua crescendo a ritmo moderado e que os riscos de deterioração diminuíram, mas acrescentou que os cortes de gastos do governo estão “restringindo o crescimento econômico.”
O Fed também acredita que os gastos das famílias, o investimento fixo das empresas e o setor de habitação têm avançado cada vez mais, mas “a política fiscal está restringindo o crescimento econômico”. Devido a impactos transitórios, a inflação tem ficado abaixo do objetivo de longo prazo da instituição, mas as expectativas de inflação no longo prazo permanecem estáveis.
A autoridade monetária reduziu sua estimativa de crescimento da economia norte-americana, mas ressaltou que a taxa de desemprego seria reduzida em ritmo mais rápido que o previsto em março, a 7,2% no fim deste ano. “As condições do mercado de trabalho melhoraram nos meses recentes, de forma geral, mas a taxa de desemprego continua elevada”, disse o FOMC.
O Banco Central norte-americano também cortou sua projeção para a inflação, sugerindo que não vê ameaça aos preços por seu atual programa de injeção monetária.
Você pode fazer o Jornal GGN ser cada vez melhor.
Apoie e faça parte desta caminhada para que ele se torne um veículo cada vez mais respeitado e forte.
FED Ben Bernanke conferência com imprensa.
Creio que durante a coletiva com a imprensa Ben Bernanke sinalizou a redução das compras de ativos em relação ao atual patamar de US$ 85 bilhões mensais,no final de 2013, e que bem no longo prazo irá analisar a questão do ajuste nos juros americanos, conforme transcrição da conferência com a imprensa em anexo.
Creio que está havendo uma precipitação por parte dos mercados, com parte avaliando que o Fed está sinalizando diminuição no nível da liquidez do sistema financeiro internacional.
Creio que o FED está sinalizando que vai parar de continuar aumentando o nível da liquidez e não que vai diminuir, como vem sendo avaliado por parte do mercado financeiro, o que é bem diferente.
Inclusive no final da transcrição há uma analogia feita Ben Bernanke, similiar a que foi pela vice-presidente do FED, Janet L. Yellen ,em fevereiro deste ano,
A Painfully Slow Recovery for America’s Workers: Causes, Implications, and the Federal Reserve’s ResponseVice Chair Janet L. YellenAt the “A Trans-Atlantic Agenda for Shared Prosperity” conference sponsored by the AFL-CIO, Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, and the IMK Macroeconomic Policy Institute, Washington, D.C.
segue em anexo link da conferência do site do Fed, bem a transcrição da fala de Ben Bernanke em pdf.
Vídeo…FOMC: Press Conference on June 19, 2013
http://www.federalreserve.gov/mediacenter/media.htm
Press Conference Transcript (149 KB PDF)
June 19, 2013
Chairman Bernanke’s Press Conference Opening Statement PRELIMINARY
Transcript of Chairman Bernanke’s Press Conference Opening Remarks
June 19, 2013
CHAIRMAN BERNANKE: Good afternoon. The Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC) concluded a two-day meeting earlier today. Based on its review of recent economic
and financial developments, the Committee sees the economy continuing to grow at a moderate
pace, notwithstanding the strong headwinds created by current federal fiscal policies.
The labor market has continued to improve, with gains in private payroll employment
averaging about 200,000 jobs per month over the past six months. Job gains, along with the
strengthening housing market, have in turn contributed to increases in consumer confidence and
supported household spending. However, at 7.6 percent, the unemployment rate remains
elevated, as do rates of underemployment and long-term unemployment. Overall, the Committee
believes the downside risks to the outlook for the economy and the labor market have diminished
since the fall, but we will continue to evaluate economic conditions and risks as they evolve.
Inflation has been running below the Committee’s longer-run objective of 2 percent for
some time and has been a bit softer recently. The Committee believes that the recent softness
partly reflects transitory factors; and, with longer-term inflation expectations remaining stable,
the Committee expects inflation to move back toward its 2 percent longer-term objective over
time. We will, however, be closely monitoring these developments as well.
In conjunction with this meeting, the 19 participants in our policy discussions—the 7
Board members and 12 Reserve Bank presidents—submitted individual economic projections.
As always, each participant’s projections are conditioned on his or her own view of appropriate
monetary policy. Generally, the projections of individual participants show they expect
moderate growth, picking up over time, and gradual progress toward levels of unemployment
and inflation consistent with the Federal Reserve’s statutory mandate to foster maximum
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employment and price stability. In brief, participants’ projections for economic growth have a
central tendency of 2.3 to 2.6 percent for 2013, rising to 2.9 to 3.6 percent in 2015. The central
tendency of their projections of the unemployment rate for the fourth quarter of this year is 7.2 to
7.3 percent, declining to 5.8 to 6.2 percent in the final quarter of 2015. Most participants see
inflation gradually increasing from its current low level toward the Committee’s longer-run
objective; the central tendency of their projections for inflation is 0.8 to 1.2 percent for this year
and 1.6 to 2.0 percent for 2015.
Before turning to today’s policy decision let me say a few words about the Federal
Reserve’s strategy for normalizing policy in the long run. In the minutes of its June 2011
meeting, the Committee set forth principles that it intended to follow when the time came to
normalize policy and the size and the structure of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet. As part of
prudent planning, we have been reviewing these principles in recent meetings. We expect those
discussions to continue and intend to provide further information at an appropriate time. For
today, I will note that, in the view of most participants, the broad principles set out in June 2011
remain applicable. One difference is worth mentioning: While participants continue to think
that, in the long run, the Federal Reserve’s portfolio should consist predominantly of Treasury
securities, a strong majority now expects that the Committee will not sell agency mortgage-
backed securities (MBS) during the process of normalizing monetary policy, although in the
longer run limited sales could be used to reduce or eliminate residual MBS holdings. I
emphasize that, given the outlook and the Committee’s policy guidance, these matters are
unlikely to be relevant to actual policy for quite a while.
Let me turn now to current policy issues. With unemployment still elevated and inflation
below the Committee’s longer-run objective, the Committee is continuing its highly
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accommodative policies. As you know, in normal times the Committee eases monetary policy
by lowering the target for the short-term policy interest rate, the federal funds rate. However, the
target range for the federal funds rate, currently at 0 to 1/4 percent, cannot meaningfully be
reduced further. Thus, we are providing policy accommodation through two alternative
methods: (1) by communicating to the public the Committee’s plans for setting the federal funds
rate target over the medium term and (2) by purchasing and holding Treasury securities and
agency mortgage-backed securities. Let me discuss a few key points regarding each of these two
policy tools.
First, today the Committee reaffirmed its expectation that the current exceptionally low
range for the funds rate will be appropriate at least as long as the unemployment rate remains
above 6-1/2 percent, so long as inflation and inflation expectations remain well-behaved (in the
senses described in the FOMC’s statement). As I have noted frequently, the phrase “at least as
long” in the Committee’s interest rate guidance is important; the economic conditions we have
set out as preceding any future rate increase are thresholds, not triggers. For example, assuming
that inflation is near our objective at that time, as expected, a decline in the unemployment rate
to 6-1/2 percent would not lead automatically to an increase in the federal funds rate target, but
rather would indicate only that it was appropriate for the Committee to consider whether the
broader economic outlook justified such an increase. All else equal, the more subdued the
outlook for inflation at that time, the more patient the Committee would likely be in making that
assessment. In the projections submitted for this meeting, 14 of 19 FOMC participants indicated
that they expect the first increase in the target for the federal funds rate to occur in 2015, and one
expected the first increase to occur in 2016. Moreover, so long as the economy remains short of
maximum employment, inflation remains near our longer-run objective, and inflation
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expectations remain well-anchored, increases in the target for the federal funds rate, once they
begin, are likely to be gradual, consistent with the Committee’s balanced approach to meeting its
employment and price stability objectives.
The purpose of this forward guidance about policy is to assure households and businesses
that monetary policy will continue to support the recovery even as the pace of economic growth
and job creation picks up. Importantly, as our statement notes, the Committee expects a
considerable interval of time to pass between the time when the Committee will cease adding
accommodation through asset purchases and the time when the Committee will begin to reduce
accommodation by moving the federal funds rate target toward more normal levels.
The second policy tool being employed by the Committee is asset purchases—specifically,
the Committee has been purchasing $40 billion per month in agency mortgage-backed securities
and $45 billion per month in Treasury securities. When our program of asset purchases was
initiated last September, the Committee stated the goal of promoting a substantial improvement
in the outlook for the labor market in a context of price stability, and noted it would also be
taking appropriate account of the efficacy and costs of the program. Today the Committee made
no changes to the purchase program.
Although the Committee left the pace of purchases unchanged at today’s meeting, it has
stated that it may vary the pace of purchases as economic conditions evolve. Any such change
would reflect the incoming data and their implications for the outlook, as well as the cumulative
progress made toward the Committee’s objectives since the program began in September. Going
forward, the economic outcomes that the Committee sees as most likely involve continuing gains
in labor markets, supported by moderate growth that picks up over the next several quarters as
the near-term restraint from fiscal policy and other headwinds diminishes. We also see inflation
moving back toward our 2 percent objective over time. If the incoming data are broadly
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consistent with this forecast, the Committee currently anticipates that it would be appropriate to
moderate the monthly pace of purchases later this year; and if the subsequent data remain
broadly aligned with our current expectations for the economy, we would continue to reduce the
pace of purchases in measured steps through the first half of next year, ending purchases around
midyear. In this scenario, when asset purchases ultimately come to an end, the unemployment
rate would likely be in the vicinity of 7 percent, with solid economic growth supporting further
job gains—a substantial improvement from the 8.1 percent unemployment rate that prevailed
when the Committee announced this program.
I would like to emphasize once more the point that our policy is in no way predetermined
and will depend on the incoming data and the evolution of the outlook, as well as on the
cumulative progress toward our objectives. If conditions improve faster than expected, the pace
of asset purchases could be reduced somewhat more quickly. If the outlook becomes less
favorable, on the other hand, or if financial conditions are judged to be inconsistent with further
progress in the labor markets, reductions in the pace of purchases could be delayed; indeed,
should it be needed, the Committee would be prepared to employ all of its tools, including an
increase in the pace of purchases for a time, to promote a return to maximum employment in a
context of price stability.
It’s also worth noting here that, even if a modest reduction in the pace of asset purchases
occurs, we would not be shrinking the Federal Reserve’s portfolio of securities but only slowing
the pace at which we are adding to the portfolio, while continuing to reinvest principal payments
and proceeds from maturing holdings as well. These large and growing holdings will continue to
put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates. To use the analogy of driving an
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automobile, any slowing in the pace of purchases will be akin to letting up a bit on the gas pedal
as the car picks up speed, not to beginning to apply the brakes.
I will close by drawing again the important distinction between the Committee’s
decisions about adjusting the pace of asset purchases and its forward guidance regarding the
target for the federal funds rate. As I mentioned, the current level of the federal funds rate target
is likely to remain appropriate for a considerable period after asset purchases are concluded. To
return to the driving analogy, if the incoming data support the view that the economy is able to
sustain a reasonable cruising speed, we will ease the pressure on the accelerator by gradually
reducing the pace of purchases. However, any need to consider applying the brakes by raising
short-term rates is still far in the future. In any case, no matter how conditions may evolve, the
Federal Reserve remains committed to fostering substantial improvement in the outlook for the
labor market in a context of price stability.
Thank you. I would be glad to take your questions.
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