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Fed shows faith in U.S. economy with bond-buying reduction

Published 30/04/2014, 20:10

(Reuters) - By Howard Schneider and Michael Flaherty

WASHINGTON, April 30 (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve on Wednesday looked past a dismal reading on first quarter U.S.growth and gave a mostly upbeat assessment of the economy'sprospects as it announced another cut in its massive bond-buyingstimulus.

Recent information "indicates that growth in economic activity has picked up ... after having slowed sharply during the winter in part because of adverse weather conditions," the central bank said in a statement after a two-day policy meeting.

"Household spending appears to be rising more quickly," itadded, although it said business investment "edged down."

The Fed said it would reduce its monthly bond purchases to $45 billion (26.65 billion pounds) from $55 billion, a widely expected decision that keeps it on track to end the program as soon as October. The decision was unanimous.

Just hours before the statement was released, the government reported that the economy grew at only a 0.1 percent annual ratein the first quarter, but the Fed pinned its hopes on other recent data that has suggested activity is bouncing back. Indeed, its statement was more upbeat than the one it issued after its last policy meeting on March 19. At that time, itnoted the activity had slowed, although it said harsh winter weather was at play.

"What the Fed is saying is ignore this first quarter number,it's not reflective of the underlying strength in the economy,"said Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at FederatedInvestors in New York.

Stocks held earlier gains, while prices for U.S. government debt slipped only slightly after the Fed's announcement. The value of the dollar held steady against the euro and the yen.

STEADY AS SHE GOES

The Fed has now reduced its monthly bond purchases by acumulative $40 billion in four steady steps. The gradual tapering seeks to close an era in which the central bank's balance sheet quadrupled to more than $4.2trillion through three separate purchase programs launched tobattle the financial crisis and the recession and slow growth that followed.

The projected end of the program sets the stage for a seriesof policy decisions expected next year on when and how to reduce the balance sheet to more usual levels, and, most notably, whento move the target interest rate above the near zero levelmaintained since late 2008.

Janet Yellen's second policy-setting session as Fed chair offered no new guidance on that front. The Fed has said it will keep the overnight target rate between 0 and 0.25 percent "for considerable time" after the bond-buying program ends - language reiterated on Wednesday.

Indeed, outside of its discussion on the economy, the Fed's statement was little changed from last month.

Going forward, the bond purchases will be split between $25billion of Treasuries and $20 billion of mortgage-backed securities, a cut of $5 billion a month to each.

Analysts expected little out of this session as the Fed'spolicy committee enters what may prove a sort of holding patternas it closes out the bond purchases and debates when an initialinterest rate increase may be warranted. Investors currently expect the first rate rise around the middle of next year.

With little sign of inflation and unemployment at astill-elevated 6.7 percent, Yellen has said there is plenty of"slack" in the economy and a need to keep rates low.

In an April 16 speech, she said the nation may be more than two years away from what the Fed views as the "longer-run normal unemployment rate" of between 5.2 percent and 5.6 percent.

"Thus far in the recovery and to this day, there is little question that the economy has remained far from maximum employment," she said. While the GDP report did not throw the Fed off course, itcould influence the discussion going forward. The 0.1 percent annual growth rate was far below expectations.

"This certainly is going to give Janet Yellen's camp a lot more ammunition to remain on the more neutral to dovish side,"Richard Cochinos, a currency strategist at Citi in New York,said ahead of the Fed's decision.

It will also focus attention on the next round of data onjobs and inflation as signs of whether what the Fed analyzed asa winter lull was in fact nothing more than that.

((Reporting by Howard Schneider and Michael Flaherty; Additionalreporting by Herb Lash in New York; Editing by Paul Simao andTim Ahmann) ((paul.simao@thomsonreuters.com)(202-898-8457)(ReutersMessaging: paul.simao.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net)))

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