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Fed expects to raise interest rates more aggressively in 2017

Central bank projects federal funds rate to hit 1.4% next year

Janet Yellen
Janet Yellen

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised interest rates for the first time in 2016 and also indicated it will raise short-term interest rates more aggressively in 2017 than initially planned.

It now expects the federal funds rate, a short-term benchmark rate for overnight interbank loans, to rise to 1.4 percent next year, up from a September estimate of 1.1 percent. With Wednesday’s hike, the central bank expects that rate will likely end this year at 0.6 percent, CNBC reported.

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The hike, only the second one since the central bank cut borrowing cuts to almost zero in 2008, was widely expected by forecasters. Federal Reserve officials project three quarter-point rate increases in 2017 and three quarter-point rate increase in 2018, according to Bloomberg.

The central bank said in a statement that a quicker move to trim rates was warranted given that inflation had moved closer to the 2 percent target and that unemployment had fallen to a nine-year low in November. President-elect Donald Trump’s economic plan to greatly increase infrastructure spending and offer large tax-cuts creates some uncertainty for the central bank.

Higher short-term interest rates typically spill over into higher long-term rates, which raises the cost of real estate financing and pushes cap rates up, putting downward pressure on real estate prices. [CNBC, Bloomberg]Konrad Putzier

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