I loved the FED's "new hiring remains subdued" - ...sigh
Fed Drops `Considerable Period' Outlook on Rates, Says It Can Be `Patient'
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000006&sid=a4WJ89SOaULQ&refer=homeJan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve policy makers unexpectedly dropped a commitment to hold interest rates low ``for a considerable period'' while voting to keep the benchmark U.S. interest rate at 1 percent. Treasury prices fell. The Federal Open Market Committee said it still can be "patient" in holding down borrowing costs, a language change that some investors said may show a rate increase will happen sooner than they expected. The FOMC voted unanimously to leave the overnight bank-lending rate at the lowest since 1958, according to the statement after its two-day meeting. "With inflation quite low and resource use slack, the committee believes that it can be patient in removing its policy accommodation," the statement said. The Fed said "output is expanding briskly" and "new hiring remains subdued," while other indicators "suggest an improvement in the labor market." Only two of the 23 firms that trade securities directly with the central bank had expected the Fed to drop the "considerable period" wording, which had been in each statement since August. <snip>
The dollar surged against the euro and the yen in New York. At 3 p.m. in New York, the dollar strengthened to $1.2509 per euroe from $1.2646 yesterday. The U.S. currency advanced to 105.85 yen from 105.55, close to the lowest since September 2000. Jon Blumenfeld, an interest rate strategist in New York at primary dealer BNP Paribas, said he sees the language change as "one step closer to tightening."" <snip>
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000006&sid=a_1pIZswzC5s&refer=homeTreasuries Fall After Fed Drops Considerable Period Phrase Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Treasuries tumbled after the Federal Reserve dropped the phrase a ``considerable period'' in describing how long it can keep its target interest rate at 1 percent. The decline in the benchmark two-year note was the biggest in three months. <snip>
Before U.S. Stocks Drop as Fed Changes Wording on Rates; Homebuilder Shares Slide
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000006&sid=aC0rcC0SYVRY&refer=homeJan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks fell after the Federal Reserve unexpectedly dropped its commitment to hold interest rates low "for a considerable period," sparking concerns that higher rates would raise corporate borrowing costs and slow profit growth. Homebuilders such as Centex Corp., KB Home and Pulte Homes Inc. led the decline. "The Fed was eventually going to have to say there will be a period where we will have to raise rates," Robert W. Smith, who manages the $5.8 billion T. Rowe Price Growth Stock Fund, said in a televised interview with Bloomberg News. "The market, while it knew it was coming, didn't want to believe it was today."snip>