Wednesday, November 2, 2011

INSTANT VIEW 5-Fed holds fire, lone dissenter wanted more easing

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Currency and Forex News
INSTANT VIEW 5-Fed holds fire, lone dissenter wanted more easing
2011-11-02 17:06 (UTC)

NEW YORK, Nov 2 (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve left

monetary policy on hold on Wednesday and offered a moderately

brighter economic outlook, but flagged risks to growth that

appeared to leave open the door for further easing.

STORY: TEXT

COMMENTS:

MARK LUSCHINI, CHIEF INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, JANNEY MONTGOMERY

SCOTT, PHILADELPHIA

'The three previous dissenters fell back in line. What is

interesting is that you have a dissenter for more easing. The

market thinks Evans, who seems to be publicly lobbying for more

MBS purchases, might be a canary in the coal mine for further

easing.

'My take-away is that there is a recognition that things

have improved as they had expected. It's a relief more than

anything else. We are clearly not out of the woods. They might

be inclined toward a QE3 but they are waiting for more evidence

that more action is needed. It may be a recognition that they

might be running out of bullets.

'The market is largely treating this as a non-event. This

statement is not reflecting a significant departure from prior

views expressed by Fed officials.'

GENNADIY GOLDBERG, INTEREST RATE STRATEGIST, 4CAST, INC., NEW

YORK

'There doesn't seem to be anything in particular out of the

ordinary. The market was expecting increased communication but

there doesn't seen to be much detail in the statement. Perhaps

Bernanke will elaborate on what they intend to do to increase

communication. It appears that Evans dissented. I was expecting

more.'

'All the talk before the meeting was that they were going

to increase communication on how long rates would stay low and

whether they would tie their policy to specific indicators. I'm

hoping Bernanke will talk more about that at the press

conference.'

OMER ESINER, SENIOR MARKET ANALYST, COMMONWEALTH FOREIGN

EXCHANGE, WASHINGTON

'The initial read suggests the Fed has ever-so-slightly

upgraded its assessment of the economy over the third quarter.

That's not to say significant risks don't still exist. But I

think the headline that says household spending increased and

overall growth strengthened somewhat was, on the margin, a

slight improvement and is giving the dollar a bit of a boost.

For now, it seems QE3 is off the table, and that will put the

focus squarely back on Europe.'

GARY THAYER, CHIEF MACRO STRATEGIST, WELLS FARGO ADVISORS, ST.

LOUIS, MISSOURI

'That we don't have the dissension from the hawks is

encouraging and suggests there might be support for more

quantitative easing at some point, if necessary. It leaves the

door open for more easing.'

'The statement is consistent with the data we've seen

recently showing the economy doing a little better, but with

problems remaining in some areas.'

JOSHUA BROWN, VICE PRESIDENT OF INVESTMENTS AT FUSION ANALYTICS

IN NEW YORK

'There's not much red meat in the statement. We're going to

be more interested in how the press conference goes to see if

he gets asked about GDP targeting. There doesn't appear to be

much in the statement that's different than the expectation.

Absolutely no surprise on the rates.'

MARKET REACTION:

STOCKS: U.S. stocks hold gains

BONDS: U.S. Treasury debt prices slightly extend losses .

FOREX: The dollar trims losses vs euro.

Keywords: USA ECONOMY/FED

(Americas Economics and Markets Desk; +1-646 223-6300)

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Source: http://www.xe.com/news/2011/11/02/2256825.htm?utm_source=RSS

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