US economy looking healthy after winter freeze Yellen


(MENAFN- AFP) Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said Wednesday that the US economy is pulling away from its winter freeze, but warned of risks from the Ukraine crisis and a real-estate slowdown.

Yellen told a congressional panel that the economy is on track for "solid growth" in the second quarter after an uncommonly severe winter helped push the growth rate to near zero.

But with the housing recovery slowing and unemployment still elevated, the economy still needs "a high degree" of monetary support, including keeping the benchmark federal funds rate at its ultra-low level, she said.

Moreover, she pointed to risks to growth from the geopolitical tensions of the Ukraine crisis, as well as a possible intensification of the financial stress in emerging market economies.

In mostly sunny testimony to the Joint Economic Committee of Congress, Yellen held close to established Fed policy views, and had little net effect on markets.

After some modest swings the dollar was a bit higher at $1.3925 to the euro; the 10-year Treasury yield was slightly down at 2.58 percent, and the S&P 500 gained 0.2 percent.

Yellen said the growth stall in the first quarter stemmed from mostly transitory factors, "including the effects of the unusually cold and snowy winter weather."

"With the harsh winter weather behind us, many recent indicators suggest that a rebound in spending and production is already under way," she said.

Yellen said that market conditions have improved "appreciably," but that they "are still far from satisfactory," despite the pickup in hiring last month and the fall in the unemployment rate to 6.3 percent.

Repeating a concern she has voiced since becoming Fed chair in February, she pointed to the still-high levels of long-term unemployed and those forced to work part-time because full-time jobs are not available.

"Many Americans who want a job are still unemployed," she said.

At around five percent of the labor force, part-time employment is at "exceptionally high levels," she said.

And, she added, "We have really never seen a situation where long-term unemployment is so large, so large a fraction of the total unemployment."

- 'Somewhat faster' growth -

Yellen said she expects economic activity to expand "somewhat faster" this year than last, helped by less fighting in Washington over government spending, improved household wealth, and firmer global economic growth.

That, she expects, will begin reducing the numbers of underemployed and long-term unemployed.

But she made clear that the Fed's monetary policy -- its ultra-low interest rate stance and its slow drawdown of its bond-buying stimulus -- are still appropriate and that policy makers do not foresee raising interest rates until mid- or late 2015.

She pointed out that even as the taper of the quantitative easing (QE) program goes on -- falling from $85 billion in December to $45 billion starting this month -- the Fed continues to buy bonds from the market.

Yellen stressed that the buying helps the economy by putting "significant" downward pressure on longer-term interest rates.

And she reiterated the Fed view that inflation remains tame and is not likely to reach the Fed's 2.0 percent target in the near future.

She acknowledged that holding the benchmark fed funds rate near zero since the end of 2008, and injecting liquidity into the economy via the QE program, has helped push up the prices of assets like stocks and real estate.

But she turned back concerns of a bubble in markets, arguing that valuations for shares and homes "remain within historical norms."

"We can't detect within any certainty whether or not there is an asset bubble," she told the panel.

"For the equity market as a whole... valuations are in historically normal ranges."

She also noted that the banking system, which nearly imploded in the 2008 financial crisis, was much stronger now after rules on capital ratios were toughened.


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