PRo FOMC erhöht Fed-Funds-Zielrate auf 5,25 (5,00) Prozent
FOMC erhöht Fed-Funds-Zielrate auf 5,25 (5,00) Prozent
Washington (vwd) - Der Offenmarktausschuss der US-Notenbank (FOMC) hat am Dienstag erwartungsgemäß die Leitzinsen erhöht. Die Fed-Funds-Zielrate beträgt demnach nun 5,25 nach bislang 5,00 Prozent. Der zweite Leitzins, der Diskontsatz, wurde auf 4,75 (4,50) Prozent erhöht. Zuletzt hatte die Federal Reserve die Fed-Funds-Rate am 30. Juni um 25 Basispunkte auf 5,00 Prozent erhöht. Der Diskontsatz war am 17. November vergangenen Jahres um 1/4 Punkt auf 4,50 Prozent gesenkt worden. Weiter hieß es von den Notenbankern, die geldpolitische Richtung habe nun neutralere Vorzeichen. vwd/DJ/24.8.99/zwi
und für die englisch-freeks
PRk DOKUMENTATION/Das FOMC-Statement zur Zinserhöhung im Wortlaut
DOKUMENTATION/Das FOMC-Statement zur Zinserhöhung im Wortlaut
"The Federal Open Market Committee today voted to raise its target for the federal funds rate by 25 basis points to 5-1/4 percent. In a related action, the Board of Governors approved a 25 basis point increase in the discount rate to 4-3/4 percent. With financial markets functioning more normally, and with persistent strength in domestic demand, foreign economies firming and labor markets remaining very tight, the degree of monetary ease required to address the global financial market turmoil of last fall is no longer consistent with sustained, noninflationary, economic expansion.
Today's increase in the federal funds rate, together with the policy action in June and the firming of conditions more generally in U.S. financial markets over recent months, should markedly diminish the risk of rising inflation going forward. As a consequence, the directive the Federal Open Market Committee adopted is symmetrical with regard to the outlook for policy over the near term.
In taking the discount rate action, the Federal Reserve Board approved requests submitted by the Boards of Directors of the Federal Reserve Banks of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Richmond, Atlanta, Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas City, and San Francisco. The discount rate is the interest rate that is charged depository institutions when they borrow from their district Federal Reserve Banks." vwd/DJ/24.8.99/zwi |